After all there was no dogcart for
Judy, no mountain train, no ignominious return to
the midst of her schoolfellows, no vista of weary
months unmarked by holidays.
But instead, a warm, soft bed, and
delicate food, and loving voices and ceaseless attention.
For the violent exertion, the scanty food, and the
two nights in the open air had brought the girl to
indeed a perilous pass. One lung was badly inflamed,
the doctor said; it was a mystery to him, he kept
telling them, how she had kept up so long; an ordinary
girl would have given in and taken to her bed long
ago. But then he was not acquainted with the
indomitable spirit and pluck that were Judy’s
characteristics.
“Didn’t you have any pain?”
he asked, quite taken aback to find such spirits and
so serious a condition together.
“H’m, in my side sometimes,”
she answered carelessly. “How long will
it be before I can get up, Doctor?” She used
to ask the latter question of him every morning, though,
if the truth were known, she felt secretly more than
a little diffident at the idea of standing up again.
There was a languor and weariness
in her limbs that made her doubtful if she could run
about very much, and slower modes of progressing she
despised. Besides this, there was a gnawing pain,
under her arms, and the cough was agony while it lasted.
Still, she was not ill enough to lose
interest in all that was going on, and used to insist
upon the others telling her everything that happened
outside who made the biggest score at cricket,
what flowers were out in her own straggling patch
of garden, how many eggs the fowls laid a day, how
the guinea-pigs and canaries were progressing, and
what was the very latest thing in clothes or boots
the new retriever puppy had devoured.
And Bunty used to bring in the white
mice and the blind French guinea-pig, and let them
run loose over the counterpane, and Pip did most of
his carpentering on a little table near, so she could
see each fresh stage and suggest improvements as he
went along.
Meg, who had almost severed her connection
with Aldith, devoted herself to her sister, and waited
on her hand and foot; she made her all kinds of little
presents a boot-bag, with compartments;
a brush-and-comb bag, with the monogram “J.W.,”
worked in pink silk; a little work-basket, with needle-book,
pin-cushion, and all complete. Judy feared she
should be compelled to betake herself to tidy habits
on her recovery.
Her pleasure in the little gifts started
a spirit of competition among the others.
For one whole day Pip was invisible,
but in the evening he turned up, and walked to the
bedside with a proud face. He had constructed
a little set of drawers, three of which actually opened
under skilful coaxing.
“It’s not for doll-clothes,”
he said, after she had exhausted all the expressions
of gratitude in common use, “because I know you
hate them, but you can keep all your little things
in them, you see hair strings, and thimbles,
and things.”
There was a sound of dragging outside
the door and presently Bunty came in backward, lugging
a great, strange thing.
It seemed to be five or six heavy
pieces of board nailed together haphazard.
“It’s a chair,”
he explained, wiping the perspiration from his forehead.
“Oh! I’m going to put some canvas
across it, of course, so you won’t fall through;
but I thought I’d show it you first.”
Judy’s eyes smiled, but she
thanked him warmly. “I wasn’t goin’
to make any stupid thing, like Pip did,” the
small youth continued, looking deprecatingly at the
little drawers. “This is really useful,
you see; when you get up you can sit on it, Judy, by
the fire and read or sew or something. You like
it better ’n Pip’s, don’t you?”
Judy temporized skilfully, and averted
offence to either by asking them to put the presents
with all the others near the head of the bed.
“What a lot of things you’ll
have to take back to school, Ju,” Nell said,
as she added her contribution in the shape of a pair
of crochet cuffs and a doll’s wool jacket.
But Judy only flashed her a reproachful
glance, and turned her face to the wall for the rest
of the evening.
That was what had been hanging over
her so heavily all this long fortnight in bed the
thought of school in the future.
“What’s going to happen
to me when I get better, Esther?” she asked
next morning, in a depressed way, when her stepmother
came to see her. “Is he saving up a lot
of beatings for me? And shall I have to go back
the first week?”
Esther reassured her.
“You won’t go back this
quarter at all, very likely not next either, Judy
dear. He says you shall go away with some of
the others for a change till you get strong; and,
between you and me, I think its very unlikely you,
will go back ever again.”
With this dread removed, Judy mended
more rapidly, surprising even the doctor with her
powers of recuperation.
In three weeks she was about the house
again, thin and great-eyed, but full of nonsense and
even mischief once more. The doctor’s visits
ceased; he said she had made a good recovery so far,
but should have change of surroundings, and be taken
a long way from sea air.
“Let her run wild for some months,
Woolcot,” he said at his last visit; “it
will take time to quite shake off all this and get
her strength and flesh back again.”
“Certainly, certainly; she shall
go at once,” the Captain said.
He could not forget the shock he had
received in the old loft five or six weeks ago, and
would have agreed if he had been bidden to take her
for a sojourn in the Sahara.
The doctor had told him the mischief
done to her lungs was serious.
“I won’t say she will
ultimately die of consumption,” he had said,
“but there is always a danger of that vile disease
in these nasty cases. And little Miss Judy is
such a wild, unquiet subject; she seems to be always
in a perfect fever of living, and to possess a capacity
for joy and unhappiness quite unknown to slower natures.
Take care of her, Woolcot, and she’ll make a
fine woman some day ay, a grand woman.”
The Captain smoked four big cigars
in the solitude of his study before he could decide
how he could best “take care of her.”
At first he thought he would send
her with Meg and the governess to the mountains for
a time, but then there was the difficulty about lessons
for the other three. He might send them to school,
or engage a governess certainly, but then again there
was expense to be considered.
It was out of the question for the
girls to go alone, for Meg had shown herself nothing
but a silly little goose, in spite of her sixteen
years; and Judy needed attention. Then he remembered
Esther, too, was, looking unwell; the nursing and the
General together had been too much for her, and she
looked quite a shadow of her bright self. He
knew he really ought to send her, too, and the child,
of course.
And again the expense.
He remembered the Christmas holidays
were not very far away; what would become of the house
with Pip and Bunty and the two youngest girls running
wild, and no one in authority? He sighed heavily,
and knocked the ash from his fourth cigar upon the
carpet.
Then the postman came along the drive
and past the window. He poked up with a broad
smile, and touched his helmet in a pleased kind of
way. If almost seemed as if he knew that in one
of the letters he held the solution of the problem
that was making the Captain’s brow all criss-crossed
with frowning lines.
A fifth cigar was being extracted
from the case, a wrinkle was deepening just over the
left eyebrow, a twinge of something very like gout
was calling forth a word or two of “foreign language,”
when Esther came in with a smile on her lips and an
open letter in her hands.
“From Mother,” she said.
“Yarrahappini’s a wilderness, it seems,
and she wants me to go up, and take the General with
me, for a few weeks.”
“Ah!” he said.
It would certainly solve one of the
difficulties. The place was very far away certainly,
but then it was Esther’s old home, and she had
not seen it since her marriage. She would grow
strong again there very quickly.
“Oh, and Judy, too.”
“Ah-h-h!” he said.
Two of the lines smoothed themselves carefully from
his brow.
“And Meg, because I mentioned she was looking
pale.”
The Captain placed the cigar back
in the case. He forgot there was such a thing
as gout.
“The invitation could not have
been more opportune,” he said. “Accept
by all means; nothing could have been better; and
it is an exceedingly healthy climate. The other
children can ”
“Oh, Father expressly stipulates
for Pip as well, because he is a scamp.”
“Upon my word, Esther, your
parents have a large enough fund of philanthropy.
Anyone else included in the invitation?”
“Only Nell and Bunty and Baby.
Oh, and Mother says if you can run up at any time
for a few days shooting you know without her telling
you how pleased she will be to see you.”
“The hospitality of squatters
is world-famed, but this breaks all previous records,
Esther.” The Captain got up and stretched
himself with the air of a man released from a nightmare.
“Accept by all means every one of
you. On their own heads be the results; but
I’m afraid Yarrahappini will be a sadder and
wiser place before the month is over.”
But just how much sadder or how much
wiser he never dreamed.