OLD MR. WILEY
BY
GREYE LA SPINA
“He just lies here tossing and
moaning until he’s so weak that he sinks into
a kind of coma,” said the boy’s father
huskily. “There doesn’t seem anything
particular the matter with him now but weakness.
Only,” he choked, “that he doesn’t
care much about getting well.”
Miss Beaver kept her eyes on that
thin little body outlined by the fine linen sheet.
She caught her breath and bit her lower lip to check
its trembling. So pitiful, that small scion of
a long line of highly placed aristocratic and wealthy
forebears, that her cool, capable hand went out involuntarily
to soothe the fevered childish brow. She wanted
suddenly to gather the little body into her warm arms,
against her kind breast. Her emotion, she realized,
was far from professional; Frank Wiley IV had somehow
laid a finger on her heartstrings.
“If you can rouse him from this
lethargy and help him find some interest in living,”
Frank Wiley III said thickly, “you won’t
find me unappreciative, Miss Beaver.”
The nurse contemplated that small,
apathetic patient in silence. Doctor Parris had
warned her that unless the boy’s interest could
somehow be stimulated, the little fellow would die
from sheer lack of incentive to live. Her emotion
moistened her eyes and constricted her throat muscles.
She had to clear her throat before she could speak.
“I can only promise to do my
very best for this dear little boy,” she said
hurriedly. “No human being can do more than
his best.”
“Doctor Parris tells me you
have been uniformly successful with the cases he’s
put you on. I hope,” the young father entreated,
“that you’ll follow your usual precedent.”
“The doctor is too kind,”
murmured Miss Beaver with slightly lifted brows.
“I fear he gives me more credit than I deserve.”
“There I hope you’re wrong.
He calls you an intuitive psychic. It is upon
your intuitions that I’m banking now. My
affection hampers me from fathoming Frank’s
inner-most thoughts. If I were really sure
what he needed most, I’d get it for him if it
were a spotted giraffe,” declared his father
passionately. “But I’m unable to go
deeply enough into his real thoughts.”
“If his own father cannot think
of something he would care for enough to make him
want to live, how can an outsider find out what he
might be wanting?” argued the nurse, a touch
of resentment in her voice. “Would not
his own mother know what would make him want to take
hold on life?”
There was an awkward pause.
“His mother,” began Frank
Wiley III and was interrupted by a light tap on the
door panel, at which he went silent, turning away as
if relieved to escape any explanation.
The door swung open, permitting the
entrance of a young and very pretty woman, one who
knew exactly what a charming picture she made in jade
negligee over peach pajamas. About her exceedingly
well-shaped head ash-blonde hair lay in close artificial
waves. She was such a distinctively blonde type
that Miss Beaver could not control her slightly startled
downward glance at the dark child tossing on the bed.
Her upward look of bewilderment was met by Frank Wiley’s
faint smile.
“He takes after the founder
of our family,” said he in a low, almost confidential
voice. “His great-grandfather was said to
have had Indian blood in his veins, as well as a touch
of old Spain. The boy doesn’t look like
his mother or me. He’s a real throw-back.”
The pretty woman had come across the
room, pettishly lifting her silk clad shoulders.
Through the straps of embroidered sandals red-tipped
toes wriggled. At the tumbled bed and its small
restless occupant she threw what appeared to Miss
Beaver a distasteful glance, ignoring the nurse entirely
although she had not met her previously and must have
known that the strange young woman was the new night
nurse.
“Do come to bed, Frank,”
she urged crossly, placing a proprietary hand on her
husband’s coat sleeve. “It won’t
do you any good to moon around in here and it might
disturb Francis.”
Miss Beaver stood by her patient’s
bed, her clear gray eyes full upon young Mrs. Wiley.
The nurse experienced a kind of disgust, together with
one of those uncomfortable intuitions upon the reliability
of which Doctor Parris was always depending.
She knew, all at once, that Mrs. Wiley was that strange
type of modern woman which makes a cult of personal
beauty, taking wifehood lightly and submitting to maternity
as infrequently as possible.
“I suppose you’re right,
Florry,” the father conceded, with a last solicitous
look at the exhausted child. “Miss Beaver...?”
The nurse nodded, her lips a tight red line.
“It would be better for the
patient if the room were quiet and darkened,”
she said with decision.
When the door had closed behind the
pair, Miss Beaver busied herself making the child
more comfortable for the night. She smoothed out
the cool linen sheets, drawing them taut under the
wasted little body. She bathed the hot face with
water and alcohol. To all her ministrations the
child submitted in a kind of lethargy, speaking no
word, making no sign that he had noticed a different
attendant. When she had quite finished, he breathed
a long sigh of relaxation; his quivering, weak little
body went suddenly limp, and Miss Beaver had a good
scare as she bent over him, trying to bring back that
weary and reluctant spirit to its exhausted mortal
domicile.
It was by then nearly half past seven.
The child lay supine; heavy-lidded eyes half opened
upon this tormentress who had somehow succeeded in
calling him back into the dimly lighted room from the
shadows of Lethe’s alluring banks. Miss
Beaver, kneeling beside young Frank’s bed, talked
tenderly to him in a soft monotone. She made all
manner of gratuitous promises, if only Frank would
try like a good boy to get well. She told him
firmly that he could, if he wanted to. She made
her suggestions with gently persuasive voice, coloring
all she said with the warmth of a heart peculiarly
open to the unknown needs of the listless child.
To those unknown needs she opened wide her spirit,
crying within for enlightenment and help.
While she was thus occupied, she became
aware of that sensation of being watched that is so
startling when one considers oneself alone. Without
rising, she turned her face quickly from the pillow
of young Frank and looked across the bed. A member
of the household about whom Doctor Parris had neglected
to tell her was standing there, one finger on his
lips which, though firm, wore a reassuring smile that
immediately conveyed his warm friendliness. He
was a well preserved elderly gentleman of aristocratic
mien, clad in a bright blue garment of odd cut, his
neck wound about with spotlessly white linen in lieu
of a starched collar. His high nose, raised cheek-bones,
flashing black eyes and olive skin contrasted in lively
fashion with a heavy mane of white hair. His
eyes as well as his lips conveyed a kindliness which
Miss Beaver’s answering smile reciprocated.
Tapping his lips again with admonitory
forefinger, the old gentleman now produced, with a
broad smile, something from beneath his right arm.
Leaning down, he set this carefully beside the listless
child. As he put it down, it gave a whining little
cry.
Young Frank’s eyes widened incredulously.
Miss Beaver kept him under intent regard as he turned
his dark head on the pillow to see what it was that
was sitting on the bed.
“Oh!” he cried in a kind
of rapture and put one thin white hand outside the
covers to touch the small creature that now stood wagging
a brief tail in friendly fashion. “Is it
mine?”
The child looked up at the old gentleman
who once more, with serious mien and a significant
movement of his head toward the door, gestured for
silence. The boy’s eyes blinked once or
twice; then with a weak but ecstatic smile he laid
a pale hand upon the furry coat of the little dog
that began to bounce about, licking the hand that caressed
it.
Miss Beaver told herself that the
old gentleman had found a way to lay hold on young
Frank’s reluctant spirit. She watched color
creep into the boy’s face as he cuddled the
little dog blissfully, and she drew a deep breath
of heart-felt relief when the heavy eyelids drooped
and the boy slipped off into a natural sleep, nothing
like the heavy coma from which she had struggled so
hard to bring him back earlier that night.
She looked up thankfully to meet the
understanding gaze of the old gentleman who with that
gesture of admonishment bent over and picked up the
dog, tucked it under his blue-sleeved arm and went
across the room to the door. He did not speak
but Miss Beaver received the vivid impression that
his visit would be repeated the following night; it
was as if her sensitive intuitions could receive and
register a wordless message from that other sympathetic
soul.
The following morning found the lad
refreshed and improved. His first waking thought
was for the dog and in reply to his cautiously whispered
inquiry Miss Beaver whispered back that his grandfather
(the strong family resemblance made her sure it had
been the boy’s wise grandfather who had found
a means of rousing the child from an all-but-fatal
lethargy) had taken it with him but would bring it
again that night. Miss Beaver wondered at herself
for promising this but felt somehow sure that old
Mr. Wiley would bring the pup without fail. She
believed that she had read indomitable determination
in those piercing black eyes; she knew inwardly that
he would not rest until he had found that thing which
would give young Frank renewed interest in living.
Although the child appeared, if anything,
a trifle less apathetic the following day and Miss
Beaver felt that each succeeding visit of old Mr.
Wiley with the fox-terrier would give the lad another
push toward convalescence, yet the nurse did not feel
inclined to mention openly that secret visit in the
dead of night. The old gentleman’s finger
tapping his gravely smiling lips was one thing that
restrained her; the other was the irritation betrayed,
ingenuously enough, by the boy’s mother during
her early morning visit to the sickroom.
Young Mrs. Wiley looked especially
pretty in a pleated jade sports skirt, a white pullover
sweater, a jade beret on her fair hair. Under
one arm she carried a small white Pomeranian about
whose neck flared a matching wide jade satin bow.
“Well, how is Francis this morning?”
she inquired briskly with the determined manner of
one dutifully performing an unpleasant task. “He
looks better, doesn’t he?”
Miss Beaver, to whom this inquiry
was addressed, nodded shortly.
The boy did not look at his pretty
young mother after his first indifferent glance as
she entered the room. He lay in silence with
closed eyes and compressed lips, a most unchildlike
expression on his thin boyish face.
“Look, Francis! See how
sweet Kiki looks with this big green bow!”
Mrs. Wiley dropped the Pomeranian
on the bed. The dog snarled and snapped viciously.
Frank thrust out one hand and gave the animal a pettish
push. Bestowing a hard, cold glare on her son,
Mrs. Wiley snatched up the growling dog in high indignation.
“There! I ask you, nurse,
if that child isn’t just unnatural. I thought
boys liked dogs. Francis is queer. I believe
he actually hates Kiki.” She lifted
the dog against her face, permitting it to loll its
pink tongue against her carefully rouged cheek.
“Pwecious ... Was it muvver’s own
pwecious ikkle Kiki? Francis,” she
addressed her son sharply, “you’ll have
to get over your nasty ugliness to poor little Kiki.
It’s a shame, the way you hate dogs!”
“But I don’t hate dogs!”
cried the boy vehemently, his voice breaking with
indignant resentment. “It’s just Kiki.
I’d love to have a little dog of my very own,
Mother. If you’d only let me have a little
dog of my very own!” The faint voice died away
in a sick wail. The boy’s eyelids closed
tightly against gushing tears.
Mrs. Wiley gave a short exclamation of impatience.
“Francis has the idea that a
dirty mongrel would be nicer than a beautiful pedigreed
dog like Kiki,” she cried disgustedly.
“But why not try letting him
have a dog of his own?” asked Miss Beaver ill-advisedly,
her interest getting the better of her. “Perhaps
it would give him interest enough ...”
“Nonsense!” snapped Mrs.
Wiley sharply. “I won’t have street
mutts wandering around the house to irritate poor
little Kiki. Nasty smelly common mongrels
with fleas. Indeed not. I’m surprised
at you, nurse, for making the suggestion.”
With that, young Mrs. Wiley removed
her vivid presence from the room, leaving Miss Beaver
shrugging her shoulders and raising her eyebrows.
And the little boy crying softly, the sheet pulled
over his dark head.
“What’s all this, Frankie?” asked
the father’s voice.
“She won’t let
me have a dog of my own,” sobbed the boy, coming
out from under the concealing sheet, lips a-quiver,
eyes humid.
Miss Beaver’s lips compressed.
He called his mother “She” as if she were
an outsider....
Frank Wiley III stood for a moment
looking at his son, then let himself gently down on
the edge of the bed, laying one big palm on the little
chap’s hot forehead. He did not speak, just
sat and stroked the fevered brow with tenderness.
On his face a dark look brooded. His eyes were
absent, unhappy.
“Daddy, why couldn’t I
have just a little puppy of my own?”
The father replied with obvious effort.
“You know, Frankie, we have
one small dog already,” said he with forced
lightness.
“Oh! Kiki!”
“Couldn’t you manage to make friends with
Kiki?”
“She doesn’t really
want Kiki to like me, Daddy.” (Wise beyond
his years, marvelled Miss Beaver.) “Kiki
doesn’t really like little boys.”
“Oh, my God, Frankie, don’t
go to crying again! Don’t you see that Daddy
can’t quarrel with Mother over a dog? Try
to get well, old man, and we’ll see then what
we can do. How about a pony, son?”
The little boy disappeared under the
sheet, refusing to reply. Miss Beaver could not
bear his convulsive, hardly-controlled sobs, and turned
an accusing face upon Frank Wiley III.
“Is it possible,” she
asked icily, “that Frank’s mother would
actually refuse him so small a thing as a puppy, if
it meant the merest chance of his getting better?”
The face turned to hers was gloomy, the voice impatient.
“Oh, good God! Was ever
a man in such a damnable situation? My dear Miss
Beaver, ask the doctor to tell you how much influence
I have in this household, before you blame me for
not taking a firm stand with a woman as nervous and
temperamental as Mrs. Wiley. I’d give my
life willingly to bring my boy back to health but
unhappily I’m not like the founders of our family.
Some day I’ll show you our family album.
You’ll find it easy to trace the strong resemblance
Frankie has to his forebears. Its the damnably
high spirit he gets from them that is so stubbornly
killing him now.”
He rose, wheeled about and went to
the door. Paused. Still with that brooding
dark look on his face he turned to her again.
“If my death would make it any
easier for Frank, I wouldn’t hesitate a moment.
I’m a failure. It wouldn’t matter.
But I feel that by living and watching over him I’m
standing between my boy’s development as an
individual, and the subtlest, softest peril that could
possibly threaten him. I would rather he died,
if he cannot bring about what he wills for his own
development. As for me, I ... I am a dead
man walking futilely among the living.”
With that, he swung out of the room.
Miss Beaver knelt by the boy’s
bed, murmuring persuasively to him as she strove to
make him check his hysterical sobs.
“Frankie, you really must stop
crying. You’re too big a chap to cry and
it only makes you worse. If you’re a good
boy to-day and eat your food, I’ll let your
grandfather bring the little dog tonight,” she
promised rashly.
The sheet turned down and Frank’s
reddened face peered at her plaintively.
“That was my great-grandfather,”
he assured her gravely.
“Well, great or great-great,
it’s all the same,” she conceded good-humoredly.
“Do you really think he’ll bring Spot
tonight?”
“Of course he will. But
you must eat your meals, take a long nap, and stop
crying.”
“Oh, I promise!” the boy cried eagerly.
The day, Miss Beaver was told later,
was uneventful. She had remained with the day
nurse until Doctor Parris had made his visit.
The doctor had been much pleased to find his small
patient in good spirits and congratulated himself
upon having put Miss Beaver on the case.
“If our young friend continues
to improve like this, Miss Beaver,” he joked,
“we’ll have him playing football within
a month.” He lowered his voice for her
ear only. “Has anything particular come
under your notice that might account for this agreeable
change?”
Miss Beaver’s forehead wrinkled
slightly. She regarded the doctor from narrowed,
thoughtful eyes.
“Tell me, Doctor Parris, if
it isn’t asking too much, why Mr. Wiley is a
Man-Afraid-of-his-Wife?”
The doctor could not repress an involuntary chuckle.
“Come now, nurse, don’t you think you’re
asking rather a good deal?”
“No, I don’t,” retorted
Miss Beaver shortly. “Nor do you think so,
either. What I’m trying to get at is, why
Mr. Wiley lets Mrs. Wiley prevent him from giving
Frank a puppy that he wants?”
The doctor regarded her thoughtfully.
“So it’s a pup the boy wants. Ha,
hum!” he uttered.
“I’m asking you,” she repeated impatiently.
“Oh! Eh! Well!
Mrs. Wiley, you have undoubtedly discerned, is one
of those self-centered egotists who simply cannot
permit people to live any way but her way. She
won’t have another dog in the house because it
might interfere with the comfort of that silly damn excuse
me Pom of hers. If Frank were a bit
older and could feign a penchant for the Pom and his
mother got the idea that the animal’s affection
might be alienated from her, she would at once get
the child another dog, just to keep him away from
Kiki.”
“All of which sounds subtle
but isn’t very helpful,” decided Miss Beaver
with unflattering directness. “I’ve
told Mr. Wiley that I thought a dog might interest
his son and Mr. Wiley replies that his wife won’t
let him get one. There is something more behind
this and it’s obvious you don’t want to
tell me.”
“Oh, hang it, nurse! You
always manage to get your own way with me, don’t
you? I’ll probably have to marry you one
of these days, so I can keep the upper hand,”
he grinned. “Well, then, Wiley is a weak
sister and oughtn’t to be. He’s completely
under his chorus-girl wife’s thumb. He
lost a good bit in Wall Street and what’s left
is in her name, so he’s got to watch his step
until he’s recouped his losses.
“If he were like his father
or his grandfather ... but he isn’t,”
snapped the doctor vexedly. “Now, this boy
here, he’s a throw-back, young Frank is.
He’s the spittin’ image of the founder
of the family and I’m willing to wager he’s
got the grit and determination that once endowed old
Frank Wiley I.”
“I’ve observed,”
murmured Miss Beaver, “that you and his father
call the boy Frank, while his mother refers to him
as Francis.”
“That’s her hifalutin
way of putting on the dog, nurse,” Doctor Parris
grinned wickedly. “His name on the birth
certificate is Frank but she’d make a girlish
Francis of him if she had her own way. For some
reason she isn’t getting it. Her husband
sticks to the old family name of Frank and the boy
won’t answer to Francis.
“She has a healthy respect for
the first old Frank Wiley. If you were to see
the family album, nurse, you’d be quick to catch
the look in the old boy’s eyes. Nobody
ever put anything over on that lad, believe me.”
“I’ve no doubt of that,”
thought Miss Beaver to herself, the indomitable countenance
of her midnight visitor clear before her mind’s
eye. It was astonishing, that strong family resemblance.
Aloud she snapped: “Family album, indeed!
What I’m after is to get permission for this
child to have a pet. I’m positive it would
make all the difference in the world to him.”
“You won’t get permission,
nurse. Mrs. Frank won’t have any other pets
around to bother precious Kiki,” he said
grimly.
“Not if it’s a matter of life or death?”
she persisted.
“She would laugh at your putting
it just that way,” growled the doctor, an absent
expression stealing over his kindly face.
“Well, we’ll see what
we’ll see,” observed Miss Beaver cryptically,
her mouth an ominous tight red line.
The doctor suddenly spoke close to
her ear, an odd note in his voice. “I’m
going to prescribe something very unusual, nurse.
Tomorrow night a covered basket will be delivered
here for you. Take it into the boy’s room
and open it if he wakens during the night. Understand?”
“I can’t say I do, Dr. Parris.”
“You will,” he promised.
“I’ll take that basket and its contents
when I come around for my morning call. Unless,”
he told her grimly, “I can see my way to make
the prescription stick.”
It was with the utmost anxiety that
Miss Beaver awaited the coming that night of old Mr.
Wiley. The day nurse had told her that Frank had
eaten a good lunch and what for him was a hearty supper.
He had agreed to sleep if he were awakened the moment
Spot arrived, and Miss Beaver had accepted his whispered
offer. To her relief, he fell asleep immediately,
natural color on his thin cheeks.
Mr. Wiley’s light tap came on
the door panel. She met his grave smile with
a soft exclamation of welcome. The small dog was
tucked under one arm and he paused to warn her with
that admonitory touch of one finger to his lips that
the secret of his visits must be preserved. She
nodded comprehension, leaned over the sleeping boy
and whispered softly in his ear.
He stirred, opened drowsy eyes.
Then he pulled himself up on his pillow, reaching
thin hands out to the spotted dog which nipped playfully
at him.
“Isn’t he wonderful? When may I have
him all the time?”
“When you’re well and
don’t need a night nurse,” promised Miss
Beaver rashly and was rewarded by a broad smile from
the courtly old gentleman who tipped back his white-maned
head and laughed silently but whole-heartedly.
“I’ll get well at once,
nurse. Don’t you think I might be well enough
tomorrow? Or the day after? Not,” he
added politely, making Miss Beaver’s heart ache
with his childish apology, “not that I want you
to leave, you know.”
“That will be for the doctor
to decide, Frank. But the more you eat and sleep
and grow happy in your heart, the faster you’ll
get well,” advised Miss Beaver earnestly.
For a long happy hour young Frank
fraternized with the fox-terrier while the old gentleman
sat silently observing him, a grimly humorous smile
hovering about his firm lips. Then the boy’s
eyes began to cloud sleepily and much to Miss Beaver’s
surprise and pleasure Frank relinquished his canine
playmate and fell asleep, a blissful smile curving
his childish mouth as he breathed with soft regularity.
Then old Mr. Wiley picked up the puppy,
tucked it under one blue-clad arm and again admonishing
Miss Beaver with a finger athwart his lips, tiptoed
from the room, closing the door behind very gently.
The nurse thought with a sigh of relief
that the old gentleman had looked both pleased and
gratified. She herself could hardly wait for
morning, and for the day to pass, and was both pleased
and encouraged herself when she went on duty the next
night. Frank had asked to sit up for supper and
when Miss Beaver entered the room he manfully refused
the day nurse’s assistance back to bed.
The day nurse’s up-lifted brows betrayed her
astonishment at the sudden turn for the better the
young patient had taken.
“I’m almost well,”
piped up Frank Wiley IV, the moment the door closed
behind the day nurse. “Tomorrow, the doctor
says, I can sit out in the garden in the sun.
Couldn’t I have Spot then?”
“You just leave that to me,”
said Miss Beaver determinedly. “I may have
much to say about your keeping Spot, Frank.”
In her heart she was in reality panic-stricken
for she knew that pretty Mrs. Wiley would indifferently
laugh off the idea that ownership of a dog could mean
returned health to her little son. Upon Frank
Wiley III Miss Beaver felt no reliance could be placed;
he was an uxorious weakling. Her unfounded hope
rested on old Mr. Wiley alone; old Mr. Wiley whose
firm mouth and implacable dark eyes made her feel that
he, and he alone, held the key to the situation.
That he had realized young Frank’s need and
had filled it, albeit in secret, gave her to believe
that he would also furnish such good reason for yielding
to young Frank’s boyish yearning as would make
Mrs. Frank retire in disorder from any contest of
clashing wills.
But when the old gentleman stepped
into the room that night he did not carry the little
dog under his arm; what he had was something bulkier.
He stopped beside the basket which had been sent to
Miss Beaver and which she had not yet opened.
He leaned down and released the lid. A little
fox-terrier jumped out and stood, one small paw upheld,
its head cocked to one side.
Miss Beaver drew in a quick gasping
breath of admiring amazement at what she realized
was the doctor’s unusual prescription. If
only old Mr. Wiley would stand by, to uphold it, she
felt that the boy would recover. She drew his
attention with a gesture.
“See how nicely our patient’s
coming along, Mr. Wiley,” she whispered.
“Oh, please, won’t you make them let him
keep the little dog Doctor Parris sent him? You
can. I know you can.”
Old Mr. Wiley leaned over the bed,
apparently taking pleased note of the faint color
on the boy’s cheeks. He smiled with obvious
satisfaction. He lifted his head, met Miss Beaver’s
pleading eyes, and nodded emphatically. Then
he slackened his hold on whatever he had tucked under
one arm and deposited it at the foot of the bed, meeting
Miss Beaver’s questioning eyes with a significant
narrowing of his own. She looked at the thing,
then up at him, puzzled. What he had brought in
was one of those huge, plush-covered atrocities with
tall ivory letters on the front that proclaimed it
to be a Family Album. She surmised that this
must be the album which the doctor had said she should
look over to note how closely the small boy in the
bed resembled his ancestors.
With a light gesture old Mr. Wiley
relegated the album to the background, his glance
seeking the fox-terrier that still hesitated in the
middle of the room. Miss Beaver understood.
She gently wakened the small patient, who sat up rubbing
sleepy eyes expectantly. The dog, sensing a play-mate,
bounded upon the bed and began lapping at Frank’s
eager fingers with small whimperings.
“He loves me. Don’t
you, Spot? Look, nurse. He has black spots
over his eyes, bigger than I remembered them.
And he seems littler tonight, doesn’t he?
But he knows me. Gee, I wish I could keep him
all the time.”
Old Mr. Wiley sat silently in a comfortable
chair at the shadowy back of the room as he had done
on his previous visits but his severe old features
softened as he watched the happy child and the antics
of the little dog. When at last Frank’s
eyes grew humid and heavy with sleep, and he began
to slip down on his pillow, he clung to his canine
playmate, refusing to relinquish the puppy which had
cuddled cosily against him.
Old Mr. Wiley’s heavy brows
lifted into a straight line over his high nose.
A grimly ironical smile drew up the corners of his
mouth. He made a gesture of resignation.
His humorously twinkling eyes met the consternation
in Miss Beaver’s but he appeared pleased and
unmoved at the prospect of the dog’s remaining
with the boy. He rose from his comfortable chair,
drew a deep breath, again touched the admonitory finger
to his lips and withdrew, still smiling. The door
closed quietly behind his stately blue-clad figure.
Miss Beaver told herself agitatedly
that he had no business to throw the onus of the whole
situation onto her shoulders; but even while she resented
this high-handed behavior she was inwardly aware with
one of her strong intuitions that old Mr. Wiley knew
indubitably what he was about, and that at the psychological
moment he would justify her in permitting the dog
to remain with young Frank.
She was in no hurry the following
morning to turn over her patient to the day nurse
and lingered on in the hope that Doctor Parris would
appear early enough to get the dog away, as he had
half hinted. That he would do his best to make
the prescription stick she saw immediately after he
took a single look at young Frank who sat up nimbly,
his color normal for the first time in weeks.
The suppressed excitement in the atmosphere Doctor
Parris could hardly be expected to understand until
the boy drew back the covers to show the inquisitive
black nose and beady eyes hidden beneath.
“Gee, Doctor Parris, isn’t
he just the cutest dog you ever saw?” chuckled
young Frank. “Oh, gosh, here she
comes!”
The cover was whipped over the dog,
whose whimpers subsided with uncommonly good sense.
Perhaps young Mrs. Wiley might not have felt the puppy’s
presence but Kiki’s sharp nose was not so easily
put upon. Kiki, with a shrill bark, scrambled
from her arms and leaped upon the bed where he began
scratching furiously at the cover which Frank was holding
desperately but vainly against this unexpected onslaught.
“What on earth ...” began
his mother, her eyes going from Kiki to Miss
Beaver’s harried expression. “Oh!
A nasty little dog right in Francis’s bed!
Francis, push it out! It’s probably full
of fleas. How did that nasty little mongrel get
in here?”
“This pup isn’t a mongrel,
Mrs. Wiley,” snapped the doctor. “Anyone
can see with half an eye it’s a pedigreed animal.”
She disregarded him. “Frank!
Come here! Nurse, you should have known better
than to allow that horrid little mutt....”
Frank Wiley III almost ran into the
room, obviously distressed over something quite different
from his wife’s trouble.
“Somebody has meddled with one
of our family portraits,” he cried with obvious
agitation. “It’s been damaged....”
“Oh, bother the family portraits!”
shrilled his wife, highly exasperated. “Look
at the nasty common dog this nurse has let Francis
have right in his bed! I never heard of such nerve!
Call Mason! Have him put this dog out immediately!”
“I’ll take the dog, if
it’s to be put out,” growled Doctor Parris.
“I know a good dog when I see one,” he
muttered resentfully.
“Let me see that dog!”
exclaimed Frank Wiley III in a strangely grave voice.
He pushed the frantically excited Kiki from the
bed to the floor. He drew back the cover from
the little dog huddled apprehensively against young
Frank’s thin body. “Oh, good Lord!
It’s incredible! It just isn’t possible!”
“Isn’t it?” snapped
his wife, looking with distastefully wrinkled nose
at her husband’s chalky face, wide staring eyes.
“Well, here it is and out it goes. Ring
for Mason, Frank, at once. I want this dirty little
mongrel out!”
Without paying the slightest attention,
her husband turned to Miss Beaver. As he did
so, his staring eyes fell upon the ornate plush album
on the foot of the bed.
“How did that get here?” he demanded.
“Old Mr. Wiley brought it last
night,” admitted Miss Beaver, who was feeling
a trifle indignant at the old gentleman’s defection.
“Old Mr. Wiley?” echoed
Doctor Parris; stupidly, for him, Miss Beaver thought.
“Old Mr. Wiley?”
Frank Wiley III, his voice shaky, almost shouted at
her.
“Do you mean to stand there
and tell me that old Mr. Wiley was here and brought
that album?”
“I may as well tell you now
as ever,” snapped Miss Beaver and deliberately
turned her back upon Mrs. Frank, addressing herself
pointedly to Doctor Parris and the boy’s father.
“The old gentleman has been in here every night
to see Frank since I’ve been on duty and he
brought his little dog, and in my opinion his little
dog should get the credit of any improvement in the
patient’s condition.”
Frank Wiley III picked up the bulky
volume and began turning the thick cardboard pages.
His hands trembled; his face was queerly pasty.
“Turn the pages yourself, nurse,
will you? See if you can find old Mr. Wiley’s
picture.”
Miss Beaver flipped the cardboard
pages one after another until a familiar face looked
quizzically at her from a faded old daguerrotype.
She put on finger triumphantly on it.
“Here he is. This is old Mr. Wiley.”
Mrs. Frank tiptoed nearer, took a
single look, then with a shrill scream fainted into
Doctor Parris’s convenient arms.
He muttered under his breath:
“Superstitious damsel, this.” Of Miss
Beaver he asked drily as he deposited his fair burden
distastefully in the big chair where the old gentleman
had been sitting on his nightly visits: “My
dear Miss Beaver, are you very certain old Mr.
Wiley has been dropping in of nights?”
“Of course I am,” declared
Miss Beaver indignantly. “Is it so astonishing
that I recognize a face I’ve been seeing now
for three consecutive nights?”
“This is unbelievable,” Frank Wiley
III gasped.
Said the doctor gravely: “I
ask you to be so very certain, nurse, because the
original of that picture has been dead for over fifteen
years.”
As those astonishing words fell on
Miss Beaver’s ears, she turned from the doctor
in sheer resentment.
“I don’t care for practical
jokes,” said she with dignity to the boy’s
apparently stupefied father, “and I must say
I resent being made sport of. I tell you plainly
that old Mr. Wiley, the man in this picture,”
and she tapped her finger impressively on the album
page, “has spent a couple of hours with Frankie
and me every night since I’ve been on duty here,
and that’s that!”
“Then that’s settled,”
exclaimed the boy’s father in a loud and determined
voice. “The dog stays.”
As if miraculously restored, Mrs.
Frank sprang to her feet.
“Is that so? Well,
my dear husband, I’m afraid you’re sadly
mistaken. The dog goes!” She gave her husband
glare for glare, the rouge standing in two round spots
on her white face.
His look was one of active dislike.
“We’ll see about that, Florry. All
of you, come out into the hall. I want you to
see something. Then let anyone say Frank can’t
keep that dog!”
He beckoned imperatively and they
followed down the great staircase into the great hall
below, where he stopped under a gilt-framed oil portrait,
life size. His finger pointed significantly.
Miss Beaver deciphered the small label
at the front of the massive frame. The painting
was a portrait of Frank Wiley I, the founder of the
Wiley family. Her eyes rose higher to really look
at the picture for the first time since she had been
in the house. It was the living likeness of old
Mr. Wiley and it almost seemed to her that, as she
stared, one of his eyelids quivered slightly as if
in recognition of her belated admiration for his diplomatic
procedure. Beside him on the painted table one
of his fine hands lay negligently or rather, seemed
to be lying higher than the table proper, resting
on ... was it just bare canvas?
“Look for yourself, Florry!
Where is the fox-terrier that was painted sitting
on the table under Grandfather’s hand?”
Young Mrs. Wiley stared pallidly at
the likeness of the founder of the Wiley clan.
“White paint,” she conjectured. Then,
peering closer at the canvas: “Somebody’s
scraped off the paint where the dog used to be.”
Stiff and grim, his own man now, her husband faced
her.
“Does my boy keep that dog?”
Behind them sounded a low exclamation.
At the head of the staircase stood young Frank, the
puppy tucked securely under one arm.
“Nobody’s going to take
away my little dog that Great-grandfather Wiley brought
me,” cried the lad stoutly, black eyes flashing,
thin face determined and unyielding.
“Don’t let that dog come
near me!” screamed Mrs. Frank and went into a
genuine attack of hysteria. “He isn’t
real!”
Doctor Parris exchanged a look with
Miss Beaver, whose face was pale but contented.
“I always knew you were psychic,”
he whispered, brows drawn into a puzzled scowl.
“That’s how the old gentleman, God rest
his wilful soul, could get through.”
“I wondered that he never spoke
a single word! Now that it’s over, I think
I’m going to faint,” decided Miss Beaver
shakily.
“Nonsense,” snapped the
doctor with scant courtesy. “But she
is well scared, thank God. I hardly think she
will interfere much in future with young Frank.
And by the looks of him, the boy’s father has
had his backbone stiffened considerably.”
“That painted dog?” whispered
Miss Beaver’s tremulous lips.
“Eh? Yes. Ah, yes,
the dog,” murmured the doctor, too casually.
“You--you dared!”
uttered Miss Beaver incoherently under her breath.
“Not altogether,” he protested against
her ear.
He pointed upward. Miss Beaver’s
eyes followed that gesture and met the admonitory,
inscrutable, but very gratified pictured eyes of old
Mr. Wiley.