When Clemency and James returned from their drive, they saw a glimmer of

light between the house and stable. "Aaron is out there with a lantern,"

whispered Clemency. She sat up straight, leaned into her corner of the

buggy, and adjusted her hat and straightened her hair with the pretty

young girl motions of secrecy and modesty.

James peered ahead into the darkness through which the lantern moved

like a will-o'-the-wisp. "Your uncle is here, too," he said. Then he

drew rein with a sudden, "Halloo, what is wrong?" Aaron came forward,

leaving the lantern on the ground. It lit weirdly Dr. Gordon, who was

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kneeling on the ground beside a dark mass, which looked horribly

suggestive. Then James saw another dark mass to the right, the balky

mare and a buggy.

"Doctor Gordon says you had better hitch to this post here," said Aaron

in a sort of hoarse whisper, "and then come to him. He says he needs

help, and Miss Clemency, he says, must go around the house and in the

front door, and be careful not to let the dog out, but go upstairs, and

if her mother is awake, tell her it ain't anything for her to fret

about, and Doctor Gordon will be in very soon."

"Oh, Aaron, what is the matter?" said Clemency, in a frightened whisper,

as James sprang out of the buggy.

"It ain't nothin'," replied Aaron doggedly. "Jest a man fell coming to

the office. Reckon he had a jag on. Doctor says he may have broke a rib.

He's doctorin' him. You jest run round the house, and in the front door,

Miss Clemency, and don't let out the dog, an' see to your ma."

James assisted Clemency out, and she fled, with a wild glance over her

shoulder at the lantern-lit group in front of the office door. While

Aaron tied the horse to the post James ran to Doctor Gordon. When he

drew nearer the sight became sanguinary in its details, and he could

hear from the office the raging growls and howls of the dog. He also

heard him leap against the door, as if he would break it down. Gordon

had a pail of water and a basin beside him, and he was applying water

vigorously to the throat of the prostrate figure. The water in the

basin gleamed, in the lantern light, blood red. "Just empty this basin

and fill it up from the pail," ordered Gordon in a husky voice, and

again he squeezed the reddened cloth over the throat, which James now

discerned was badly torn. The man lay doubled up upon himself as limp as

a rag.

"No, I don't think so," replied Gordon, as if in answer to an unspoken

question, as James, having complied with his request, drew near with the

basin of fresh water.

"Was it the dog?" asked James in a low voice.

"Yes, the fool came round to the office door, and--" Gordon stopped with

a miserable sigh which was almost a groan, and dipped the cloth in the

basin.

"How did you get him off?" asked James.

"I had the whip, and Aaron came in just then with that damned mare. She

had balked. I don't think it is the jugular. It can't be. Damn it, how

he bleeds! Run into the office, Elliot, and get the absorbent cotton and

the brandy. I've got to stop this somehow. Oh, my God!"

James suddenly recognized the man on the ground, and gave an exclamation

which Gordon did not seem to notice. "For God's sake, don't let that

dog out!" he cried. "Don't risk the office door. Go around the house,

the front way! Be quick!"

James obeyed. He rushed around the house, and opened the front door.

Immediately Clemency was clinging to him in the dim vestibule. "Mother

is asleep. I think Uncle Tom must have given her some medicine to make

her sleep. Oh, what is the matter? Who is that man out there, and what

ails him, and what ails the dog? I started to go in the office, but he

leapt against the door, so I didn't. I was afraid he might get out and

run upstairs and wake mother. Oh, what is it all about?"

"Nothing for you to worry about, dear," replied James. "Now you must be

a good little girl, and let me go. Your uncle is in a hurry for some

things in the office." He put away her clinging arms gently, and hurried

on toward the office, but the girl followed him. "If I don't stand ready

to shut the door behind you, that dog will be out," she said. All at

once a conviction as to something seized her, and she cried out in

terror and horror, "Oh, I know it is that man out there, and Jack wants

to get at him. I know."

"It is nothing for you to worry about, dear."

"I know. Is he going to die? Is he hurt much?"

"No, your uncle doesn't think so. Don't hinder me, dear."

"No, I won't. I will stand ready and bang the door together after you

before Jack can get out. Oh, it is that man!" Clemency was

half-hysterical, but she stood her ground. When James opened the office

door cautiously and slipped through the opening, she pushed it together

with surprising strength. "Don't get bitten yourself," she called out

anxiously.

For a moment James thought that he might be bitten, for the dog was so

frenzied that he was almost past the point of recognizing his friends.

He made a powerful leap upon James, the crest upon his back as rigid as

steel, but James snatched at his collar, threw him, and spoke, and the

well-trained animal succumbed before his voice. "Charge!" thundered the

young man, and the dog obeyed, although still bristling and growling.

James hurriedly caught up his leash and fastened him to the staple, then

he opened the inner office door, and spoke quickly and reassuringly to

Clemency, who was huddled behind it shaking with fear. "He is all

right. I have fastened him," he said. "Don't worry. Now I must go and

help your uncle."

"He didn't bite you?"

"Oh, no, he knew me the minute I spoke. Sit down here by the fire and

don't be frightened; that's a good little girl."

With that James was out by the other door and in the drive beside

Gordon, who was still assiduously applying water to the red throat of

the prostrate man. "It is beginning to slack up a little," he said

hoarsely. "Here, give me the cotton, and see if you can't get a drop of

brandy between his teeth. They are clinched, but just now he moved a

little. He may be able to swallow. Aaron, put the team into the wagon,

and get a mattress and some blankets from the storeroom. Hurry, he may

come to himself any minute, and he must not stay here any longer than

necessary." Gordon was working fiercely as he spoke, and James took the

cork from the brandy flask, and attempted to force a little between the

man's clinched teeth. Aaron hurried into the stable and lit another

lantern, and went about executing his orders. James, kneeling over the

prostrate man, attempting to minister to him, saw the face fully in the

glare of the lantern. The unconscious face did not look as evil as he

remembered it. He even had a doubt if it were the face of the man who

had that evening stood at his horse's head, and so terrified Clemency.

Then he became convinced that it was the same. There could be no

mistaking the features, which were unusually regular and handsome, but

with a strange peculiarity of lines. It seemed to James that, even while

the man was unconscious, all his features presented slightly upturned

lines as of bitter derision, intersected with downward lines of

melancholy. All these lines were very delicate, but they served to give

expression. He looked like a man who had suffered and made others suffer

for his sufferings, with a cruel enjoyment at the spectacle. It was a

strange face, but not an evil one. However, after James had succeeded in

forcing a few drops of brandy, which were met with convulsive

swallowing, between the man's teeth, he moved again, and his eyes

opened, and immediately the evil shone out of the face like a malignant

flame in a lamp. Knowledge of, and delight in, evil gleamed out of the

sudden brightness of the man's great eyes. Then the evil seemed to leap

to rage, as a spark leaps to flame. He tried to raise himself, and

cursed in a choking voice. He seemed awake most fully to consciousness,

and to know exactly what had happened. The dog in the office sent forth

a perfect volley of barks. The man had been obliged to sink back, but

his right hand fumbled feebly for his pocket.

"It is not there," Gordon said coolly.

"Shoot him, you--or--" croaked the man in his voice of unnatural rage.

"Time enough for that," said Gordon. He spoke coolly, but James saw him

shaking as if with the ague. He was deadly white, and his whole face

looked drawn and withered. Aaron came leading the team harnessed to the

wagon out of the stable. He had brought down the mattress and blankets,

as the doctor had directed, and the three men after the rude bed had

been made in the wagon lifted the man thereon. He seemed to be

conscious, but his muttering was so weak as to be almost inaudible, save

for occasional words.

After he was in the wagon Gordon, turning to James, said: "You had

better go in the house and stay with the women. Aaron will go with me. I

shall take this man to the hotel, to Georgie K.'s."

A perfect volley of mumbled remonstrances came from the prostrate figure

in the wagon. Gordon seemed to understand him. "No, I shall not take you

there," he said, "but to the hotel. You will be better cared for. I know

the proprietor."

He got in beside the man, and seated himself on the floor of the wagon.

Aaron mounted to the driver's seat.

"Tell Clemency and her mother not to worry if they are awake," Gordon

called to James as the horses started.

James said yes and went into the house. He entered through the office

door, and directly Clemency was in his arms, all trembling and

half-weeping. "Oh, what has happened? Has Uncle Tom taken him away?" she

quavered.

"Hush, dear, you will wake your mother. Yes, he has taken him away."

"What was the matter, tell me."

"He was unconscious. He had fallen."

"He came to. I heard him speak. Were any bones broken?"

"No, I think not. You must go to bed; it it very late, dear."

Clemency had put fresh wood on the hearth, and the little place was all

a-waver and a-flicker with firelight. Grotesque shadows danced over the

walls and ceiling, and sprawled uncertainly on the floor. Clemency

looked up in James's face, and her own had a shocked whiteness and

horror, in spite of the tenderness in his. "Tell--" she began.

"What, dear?"

"Was it--that man?"

James hesitated.

"Tell me," Clemency said imperiously.

"Yes, I think it was."

Clemency glanced as if instinctively at the dog, lying asleep in a white

coil on the hearth. "What was the matter with him?" she asked in a

hardly audible voice.

"He had fallen, dear, and was unconscious."

"Nothing--" Clemency glanced again at the dog, and did not complete her

question.

"He had recovered consciousness," James said hastily.

"Then he is not going to die." It was impossible to say what kind of

relief was in the girl's voice, but relief there was.

"I see no reason why he should. I don't think your uncle thought he

would die."

"Where have they taken him?"

"To the hotel. Now, Clemency dear, you must put all this out of your

mind and go to bed."

Clemency obeyed like a child. She kissed James, took a candle, and went

upstairs.

James went into his own room, but he did not undress or go to bed.

Instead, he sat at the window facing the street and stared into the

darkness, watching for Doctor Gordon's return. He sat there for nearly

two hours, then he heard wheels, and saw the dark mass of the team and

wagon lumber into sight. He ran through the house, and was in the drive

with a lantern when the team entered. "Have you been waiting for us,

Elliot?" called Doctor Gordon's tired voice.

"Yes, I thought I would."

"I stayed until I was sure he was comfortable," said Gordon. He

clambered over the wheel of the wagon like an old man. When he was in

the office with James, and the lamp was lit, he sank into a chair, and

looked at the younger man with an expression almost of despair.

"He is not going to die of it?" asked James hesitatingly.

"No," cried Gordon, "he shall not!" He looked up with sudden, fierce

resolution and alertness. "Why should he die?" he demanded. "He is far

from being old or feeble. His vitals are not touched. Why on earth

should you think he would die?"

"I see no reason," James replied hastily, "only--"

"Only what, for God's sake?"

"I thought you looked discouraged."

"Well, I am, and tired of the world, but this man is going to live. See

here, boy, suppose you see if there is any hot water in the kitchen, and

we'll have something to drink, then we will go to bed, and God grant we

don't have a night call."

After Gordon had drank his face lightened somewhat, still he looked

years older than he had done at dinner time, with that awful aging of

the soul, which sometimes comes in an instant. When finally he went

upstairs James noticed how feebly he moved. It was on his tongue's end

to offer to assist him, but he did not dare.

The next morning, before James was up, he heard the rapid trot of a

horse on the drive, and wondered if Doctor Gordon had had a call so

early. When the breakfast-bell rang only Clemency was at the table. The

maid had returned in season to get breakfast, and was waiting with a

severely interrogative face.

She had noticed blood on the frozen surface of the drive and had stood

surveying it before she entered. She had asked Clemency if anything had

happened, and the girl had told her that a man had fallen near the

office door on the preceding evening and been injured, and Doctor Gordon

had taken him home.

"What's the man's name?" Emma had inquired sharply.

"I don't know," said Clemency, and indeed she did not know, but there

was something secretive in her manner. Emma set her mouth hard and

tossed her head. Curiosity was almost a lust with her. She was always

enraged when it was excited and not gratified.

When James entered, she glanced severely at him and then at Clemency, as

she passed the muffins. She suspected something between them, and she

was baffled there.

"Has Doctor Gordon gone out?" James asked.

"Yes, he went right out as soon as he got up. Just had a cup of coffee;

wouldn't wait for breakfast," replied Emma in a nipping tone.

Neither Clemency nor James made any comment. Both knew where he had

gone, and Emma, seeing that they both knew, grew more hostile than

ever. Her manner of serving the beefsteak was fairly warlike.

After breakfast Aaron told James of some parting instructions which

Gordon had left with him. He had the team harnessed, and was to take

James to visit certain patients.

James went off on a long drive across the country, calling on his way at

the scattered houses of the patients. He did not return until noon, just

before the luncheon-bell rang. Entering by the office door he found

Gordon sitting before the hearth-fire, smoking, and staring gloomily at

the leaping flames. He looked up when James entered, said good morning

in an abstracted fashion, and asked some questions about the patients

whom he had visited. James hesitated about inquiring for the man who had

been injured the night before, but finally he did so. The dog had sprung

up to greet him, and between his pats on the white head and commands of

"Down, sir, down!" he asked as casually as he could if Gordon had seen

his patient who had fallen in the drive the night before, and how he

was. Gordon turned upon James a face of such fierce misery that the

younger man fairly recoiled. "He isn't going to die?" he cried.

"No, he is not going to die. He shall not die!" Gordon replied with

passionate emphasis. Then he added, in response to James's wondering,

half-frightened look, "I have been there all the morning. I have just

come home. I have left everything for him. I don't dare get a nurse. I

am afraid. He may talk a good deal. Georgie K. is with him now. I can

trust him, but I can't trust a nurse. I am going back after luncheon,

and you may go with me. I would like you to see him."

"Does he seem to be very ill?" James asked timidly.

"Not from the--the--wound," replied Gordon, "but I am afraid of

something else."

"What?"

"Erysipelas. I am afraid of that setting in. In fact, I am not

altogether sure that it has not. He is an erysipelas subject. He has

told me of two severe attacks which he has had. When he fell he got an

abrasion of the cheek. That looks worse than the--the--wound. I should

like you to see him. You have seen erysipelas cases, of course, in your

hospital practice."

"Oh, yes."

"There is the bell for luncheon. We will go directly afterward."

James wondered within himself at the feverish haste with which Gordon

swallowed his luncheon, frequently looking at his watch. He was actually

showing more anxiety over this man who had hounded him, of whom he had

lived in dread, than James had seen him show over any patient since he

had been with him. It seemed to him inconsistent. Mrs. Ewing did not

come down to luncheon; Clemency said that she was not feeling as well as

usual but Gordon did not seem much disturbed even by that. He gave

Clemency some powders, with instructions how to administer them to the

sick woman before he left, but he did not show concern, and did not go

upstairs to see her. Clemency herself looked pale and anxious.

She found a chance to whisper to James before he went. "Is that man very

much hurt?" she said close to his ear.

"Hush, dear. I am afraid so."

"Uncle Tom seems terribly worried. I have never seen him so worried even

over mother, and he doesn't seem worried about her now. Oh, James, she

is suffering frightfully, I know." Clemency gave a little sob. Then

Gordon's voice was heard calling imperiously, "Elliot, come along!"

James kissed the poor little face tenderly, and whispered that she must

not worry, that probably the powders would relieve her mother, and then

that she herself had better lie down and try to get a little sleep, and

hurried out.

Gordon was seated in the buggy, waiting for him. "I don't want to lose

any time," he said brusquely as James got in beside him. "Even a few

minutes sometimes work awful changes in a case like this. If he is no

worse I will leave you with him, and make a call on Mrs. Wells. I

haven't seen her to-day, and yesterday it looked like pneumonia, then

there is that child with diphtheria at the Atwaters'. I ought to go

there myself, but if he is worse you will have to go, and to a few

others, and I must stay with him."

Gordon drove furiously. Heads appeared at windows; people on the street

turned faces of wonder and alarm after him. It was soon noised about

Alton that there had been a terrible accident, that somebody was at the

point of death, but of that Gordon and James knew nothing.

When they arrived at the hotel, Gordon, after he had tied his horse,

took his medicine-case, and, followed by James, entered, and went

directly upstairs to a large room at the back of the hotel. This room

was somewhat isolated in position, having a corridor on one side and

linen closets on another, it being a corner apartment with two outer

walls. Gordon opened the door softly and entered with James behind him.

The bed stood between the two west windows. It was a northwest room. The

afternoon sun had not yet reached it. It was furnished after the usual

fashion of country hotel bedrooms. It was clean and sparse, and the

furniture had the air of having a past, of having witnessed almost

everything which occurs to humanity. It seemed battered and stained,

though not with wear, but with humanity. The old-fashioned black walnut

bedstead in which the sick man lay seemed to have a thousand voices of

experiences. A great piece was broken off one corner of the footboard.

The wound in the wood looked sinister. Directly opposite the bed stood

the black walnut bureau, with its swung glass. The glass was cracked

diagonally, and reflected the bed and its occupant with an air of

experience. Gordon went directly to his patient. Beside him sat Georgie

K. He looked at the two doctors and shook his head gravely. His great

blond face was unshaven and paled with watching. Nobody spoke a word.

All three looked at the man in the bed, who lay either asleep, or

feigning sleep, or in a stupor. Gordon felt for his pulse softly, with

keen eyes upon his face. This face was unspeakably ghastly. The throat

was swathed in bandages. There was one tiny spot of red on the white of

the linen. The man's eyes were rolled upward. Around an abrasion on the

cheek, which glistened oily with some unguent which had been applied to

it, was a circle of painful red clearly defined from the pallor of the

rest of the cheek.

Gordon spoke. "How do you feel?" he asked of the man, who evidently

heard and understood, but did not reply. He simply made a little motion

of facial muscles, of shoulders, of his whole body under the

bed-clothes, which indicated rage and impatience.

"Does that place on your cheek burn?" asked Gordon.

Again there was no answer, this time not even any motion.

"Have you any pain?" asked Gordon. The man lay motionless. "Is there any

one in the parlor?" Gordon asked abruptly of Georgie K.

"No, Doc. You can go right in there."

Gordon beckoned to James, and the two went downstairs, and entered the

room of the wax flowers and the stuffed canary.

"It looks like erysipelas," Gordon said with no preface.

James nodded.

"All I have done so far, in the absence of any positive proof of the

truth of that diagnosis, is to apply what you will think an old woman's

remedy, but I have known it to give good results in light cases, and I

did not like to resort to the more strenuous methods until I was sure of

my ground, for fear of complications. I applied a little mutton tallow,

and that was all, but the inflammation has increased since I saw him. It

now looks to me like a clearly defined case of erysipelas."

"It does to me," said James.

"So far--the--wound in the throat seems to be doing well," said Gordon

gloomily. Then he looked at the younger physician with an odd, helpless

expression. "His life must be saved," said he. "Which do you prefer of

the two methods of treating the disease--that is, of the two primary

ones? Of course, there are methods innumerable. I may have grown rusty

in my country practice. Do you prefer the leaches, the nitrate of

silver, the low diet, or the reverse?"

"I think I prefer the reverse."

"Well, you may be right," said Gordon, "and yet you have to consider

that this is a man in full vigor," he added, "that presumably he has

considerable reserve strength upon which to draw. Still if you prefer

the other treatment--"

"I have seen very good results from it," said James. He was becoming

more and more astonished at the older man's helpless, almost appealing,

manner toward himself. "What is the man's name?" he asked.

"I don't know what name he has given here," Gordon replied evasively. "I

will tell you later on what his name is."

Suddenly the parlor door was flung open, and a woman appeared. She was

middle-aged, very large, clad in black raiment, which had an effect of

sliding and slipping from her when she moved. She kept clutching at the

buttons of her coat, which did not quite meet over her full front. She

brought together the ends of a black fur boa, she reached constantly for

the back of her skirts, and gave them a firm tug which relaxed the next

moment. Her decent black bonnet was askew, her large face was flushed.

She had been a strapping, handsome country girl once; now she was almost

indecent in her involuntary exuberance of coarse femininity.

"How do you do, Mrs. Slocum?" Doctor Gordon said politely.

James rose, Gordon introduced him. Mrs. Slocum did not bow, she jerked

her great chin upward, then she spoke with really alarming ferocity.

"Where has my boarder went? That's what I want to know. That's what I

have come here for, not for no bowin's and scrapin's. Where has my

boarder went?"

A keen look came into Gordon's face. "I don't know who your boarder is,

Mrs. Slocum," he said.




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