THE CHAMBER AT THE COTTAGE.
Meanwhile Faber was making a round,
with the village of Owlkirk for the end of it.
Ere he was half-way thither, his groom was tearing
after him upon Niger, with a message from Mrs. Puckridge,
which, however, did not overtake him. He opened
the cottage-door, and walked up stairs, expecting
to find his patient weak, but in the fairest of ways
to recover speedily. What was his horror to see
her landlady weeping and wringing her hands over the
bed, and find the lady lying motionless, with bloodless
lips and distended nostrils to all appearance
dead! Pillows, sheets, blankets, looked one mass
of red. The bandage had shifted while she slept,
and all night her blood had softly flowed. Hers
was one of those peculiar organizations in which, from
some cause but dimly conjectured as yet, the blood
once set flowing will flow on to death, and even the
tiniest wound is hard to stanch. Was the lovely
creature gone? In her wrists could discern no
pulse. He folded back the bed-clothes, and laid
his ear to her heart. His whole soul listened.
Yes; there was certainly the faintest flutter.
He watched a moment: yes; he could see just the
faintest tremor of the diaphragm.
“Run,” he cried, “ for
God’s sake run and bring me a jug of hot water,
and two or three basins. There is just a chance
yet! If you make haste, we may save her.
Bring me a syringe. If you haven’t one,
run from house to house till you get one. Her
life depends on it.” By this time he was
shouting after the hurrying landlady.
In a minute or two she returned.
“Have you got the syringe?” he cried,
the moment he heard her step.
To his great relief she had.
He told her to wash it out thoroughly with the hot
water, unscrew the top, and take out the piston.
While giving his directions, he unbound the arm, enlarged
the wound in the vein longitudinally, and re-bound
the arm tight below the elbow, then quickly opened
a vein of his own, and held the syringe to catch the
spout that followed. When it was full, he replaced
the piston, telling Mrs. Puckridge to put her thumb
on his wound, turned the point of the syringe up and
drove a little out to get rid of the air, then, with
the help of a probe, inserted the nozzle into the
wound, and gently forced in the blood. That done,
he placed his own thumbs on the two wounds, and made
the woman wash out the syringe in clean hot water.
Then he filled it as before, and again forced its
contents into the lady’s arm. This process
he went through repeatedly. Then, listening, he
found her heart beating quite perceptibly, though
irregularly. Her breath was faintly coming and
going. Several times more he repeated the strange
dose, then ceased, and was occupied in binding up
her arm, when she gave a great shuddering sigh.
By the time he had finished, the pulse was perceptible
at her wrist. Last of all he bound up his own
wound, from which had escaped a good deal beyond what
he had used. While thus occupied, he turned sick,
and lay down on the floor. Presently, however,
he grew able to crawl from the room, and got into
the garden at the back of the house, where he walked
softly to the little rude arbor at the end of it, and
sat down as if in a dream. But in the dream his
soul felt wondrously awake. He had been tasting
death from the same cup with the beautiful woman who
lay there, coming alive with his life. A terrible
weight was heaved from his bosom. If she had
died, he would have felt, all his life long, that
he had sent one of the loveliest of Nature’s
living dreams back to the darkness and the worm, long
years before her time, and with the foam of the cup
of life yet on her lips. Then a horror seized
him at the presumptuousness of the liberty he had
taken. What if the beautiful creature would rather
have died than have the blood of a man, one she neither
loved nor knew, in her veins, and coursing through
her very heart! She must never know it.
“I am very grateful,”
he said to himself; then smiled and wondered to whom
he was grateful.
“How the old stamps and colors
come out in the brain when one least expects it!”
he said. “What I meant was, How glad
I am!”
Honest as he was, he did not feel
called upon to examine whether glad was really
the word to represent the feeling which the thought
of what he had escaped, and of the creature he had
saved from death, had sent up into his consciousness.
Glad he was indeed! but was there not mingled with
his gladness a touch of something else, very slight,
yet potent enough to make him mean grateful
when the word broke from him? and if there was such
a something, where did it come from? Perhaps if
he had caught and held the feeling, and submitted
it to such a searching scrutiny as he was capable
of giving it, he might have doubted whether any mother-instilled
superstition ever struck root so deep as the depth
from which that seemed at least to come. I merely
suggest it. The feeling was a faint and poor
one, and I do not care to reason from it. I would
not willingly waste upon small arguments, when I see
more and more clearly that our paltriest faults and
dishonesties need one and the same enormous cure.
But indeed never had Faber less time
to examine himself than now, had he been so inclined.
With that big wound in it, he would as soon have left
a shell in the lady’s chamber with the fuse lighted,
as her arm to itself. He did not leave the village
all day. He went to see another patient in it,
and one on its outskirts, but he had his dinner at
the little inn where he put up Ruber, and all
night long he sat by the bedside of his patient.
There the lovely white face, blind like a statue that
never had eyes, and the perfect arm, which now and
then, with a restless, uneasy, feeble toss, she would
fling over the counterpane, the arm he had to watch
as the very gate of death, grew into his heart.
He dreaded the moment when she would open her eyes,
and his might no longer wander at will over her countenance.
Again and again in the night he put a hand under her
head, and held a cooling draught to her lips; but not
even when she drank did her eyes open: like a
child too weak to trust itself, therefore free of
all anxiety and fear, she took whatever came, questioning
nothing. He sat at the foot of the bed, where,
with the slightest movement, he could, through the
opening of the curtains, see her perfectly.
By some change of position, he had
unknowingly drawn one of them back a little from between
her and him, as he sat thinking about her. The
candle shone full upon his face, but the other curtain
was between the candle and his patient. Suddenly
she opened her eyes.
A dream had been with her, and she
did not yet know that it was gone. She could
hardly be said to know any thing. Fever
from loss of blood; uneasiness, perhaps, from the
presence in her system of elements elsewhere fashioned
and strangely foreign to its economy; the remnants
of sleep and of the dream; the bewilderment of sudden
awaking all had combined to paralyze her
judgment, and give her imagination full career.
When she opened her eyes, she saw a beautiful face,
and nothing else, and it seemed to her itself the
source of the light by which she saw it. Her
dream had been one of great trouble; and when she beheld
the shining countenance, she thought it was the face
of the Saviour: he was looking down upon her
heart, which he held in his hand, and reading all that
was written there. The tears rushed to her eyes,
and the next moment Faber saw two fountains of light
and weeping in the face which had been but as of loveliest
marble. The curtain fell between them, and the
lady thought the vision had vanished. The doctor
came softly through the dusk to her bedside.
He felt her pulse, looked to the bandage on her arm,
gave her something to drink, and left the room.
Presently Mrs. Puckridge brought her some beef tea.