“There, I promise I will be
quiet and say nothing, if you let me stay. If
you do not, I’ll give the alarm in spite of you
all.”
“Pat! He’s waking up.”
With the tones of the sweet, rich
voice thrilling his nerves, Fred Chester opened his
eyes as he sat back in his chair, and gazed up at the
cluster of soft lights glowing by the ceiling; but
they did not take his attention. He was dwelling
wonderingly upon the words he had heard as if in a
dream.
His head was heavy and confused, and
it was some moments before he could grasp his position.
“Who’s waking up?” he thought.
Then his eyes fell, and he looked sharply down, and
the blood rushed surging to his temples as he saw
his beautiful visitor of the night before, then all
came back in a moment.
She was kneeling beside the wounded
man’s couch, holding his hand, and she gazed
at Chester with an appealing, wistful look in her eyes
which again sent a thrill through him, and a feeling
of misery and despair such as he had never before
felt made his heart sink. He shivered slightly
as he turned away, to glance round the room and note
that four of those whom he had previously seen were
still present.
“You’ve had a good nap, doctor,”
said a familiar voice.
“Have have I been asleep?”
said Chester, involuntarily.
“Beautifully. What a delightfully
clear conscience you must have, doctor!” said
the speaker, banteringly, “that is, if you did
not take a chloral pill on the sly. Six hours
right off.”
“Impossible!” cried Chester, angrily.
“Then my watch is a most awful
liar, and the clock on the chimney-piece there has
joined in the conspiracy.”
Chester hurriedly took out his watch,
to find that the hands stood at two, as he bent down
over his patient, who was sleeping calmly.
“We gave him a dose of the drops
as soon as the bottle came, doctor, for we did not
like to wake you after your hard night. He has
slept like a lamb ever since.”
Chester took no notice of the words,
as he busied himself about his patient, the lady drawing
back and going to a chair, waiting impatiently till
he ceased.
“How is he?” she said then excitedly.
“He could not be doing better,
madam,” said Chester, trying to speak coldly,
and avoiding for a moment the eyes which seemed to
plunge searchingly into his; and at his words he saw
that they suddenly grew dim, and that she clapped
her hands to her lips to keep back a piteous sob or
two.
“Hush, hush, my dearest,”
whispered the old housekeeper in a motherly way, and
Chester saw that a strong effort was made, and the
face from which he could not tear his eyes grew calm.
“Well, doctor, if ever I am
in a bad fix, I shall know where to apply.”
Chester turned sharply to the speaker,
and read from the cynical smile that he had seen the
impression made upon him by the agitated face which
possessed so strange a fascination.
“You prove yourself quite worthy
of your reputation, which has often reached us.”
“Any surgeon could have done
what I have, sir,” replied Chester, shortly,
and then mastering himself, he continued, as he thought
of home and all he had at stake, “I presume
that now you are at rest about your cousin’s
state, this sorry farce is at an end.”
“Very nearly a tragedy, my dear
sir,” said the other, lightly.
“You mistake me, sir. I mean this enforced
detention.”
“Oh, tut, tut, doctor!
I thought we had settled this. Surely after
your telegram, taken to the chief office, madam, your
wife, will not be uneasy.”
As he spoke he gave the lady by the
couch a mocking look, and Chester saw her turn angrily
away.
It was on the doctor’s lips
to say sharply, “I am not married, sir,”
and he felt startled as he checked himself.
Why should he have been so eager to
say that? he thought, and a peculiar feeling of resentment
grew within, as a strange conscience-pricking began
to startle him. Of what folly had he been guilty
in thought?
“Come, doctor, we have been
waiting till you woke before having some breakfast.”
The speaker rose and touched the electric
bell-push, then led the way toward a small table at
the far end of the room, the others waiting for the
doctor to follow; but he stood irresolute.
“You will join us at breakfast,
doctor?” said a low, sweet voice at his side,
making him start slightly, and then follow to the table,
to take the place pointed out by his companion on
her right, as she took the head of the table.
“As his wife,” thought
Chester; then trying hard to be perfectly cool, and
assuming to be treating his position lightly, he partook
of the meal placed before him, and joined in the general
conversation, a great deal of which dealt with the
popular out-door life of the day Lord’s,
Ascot, the promises of sport in August and September,
and the ordinary topics of the hour, all lightly traversed
by a party of gentlemen who had ample incomes for
their needs, and enjoyed life.
The ladies were increased to three
when they took their seats at the table, and Chester
soon found that two were the young wives of “Jem”
and “Paddy,” the bluff, manly fellow;
and all seemed so intent now upon ignoring the trouble
and setting their prisoner guest at his ease, that
Chester’s manner softened, and before they rose
from the table he found himself listening with increasing
interest to his neighbour’s remarks.
The excellent meal came at last to
an end, and after a few words with Chester’s
companion, two of the ladies retired while the housekeeper
quietly cleared the table; and as Marion, as they all
called her, went to the side of the couch, Jem approached
Chester.
“The papers,” he said
in the most matter-of-fact way. “Cigars
and cigarettes on that table. Spirits and soda
or seltzer in the cellarette. Pray make yourself
at home, my dear doctor, and name anything you want.
It shall be obtained directly everything,
that is, but liberty. Won’t you light
up now? My cousin there will not mind; we all
smoke. Eh, Marion?”
“I beg that Dr Chester will
not hesitate,” said the lady addressed, and
Chester drew a deep breath as he saw her cross to the
table and fetch a cigarette-box and matches.
“It would be ungracious to refuse,”
he said coldly, as he took one, and then the lighted
match from the white fingers which offered it, their
eyes meeting as he lit his cigarette, and as a slight
flush mantled the lady’s cheeks, Chester’s
heart gave one heavy throb.
The rest of that night-like day passed
in a dream, or a time in which Chester felt as if
he were suffering from some form of enchantment.
He fought hard against the strange, new, mystic influence,
and strove to raise like a shield to protect him,
his honour, his word; and again and again as he busied
himself with his patient he told himself that he dearly
loved Isabel, his betrothed, but this feeling was all
as new as it was masterful, and often when he met
the eyes of her who never left the couch in her assiduous
attentions as nurse, he felt that he was drifting
fast into a state of slavery, and that this woman was
his fate.
“She is another’s wife,”
he kept telling himself; “and I am an utter
scoundrel to give way to such thoughts. Heaven
help me! I must go before it is too late.
Have I been drugged, and has the potent medicament
sapped me to the very core?”
But he felt that he could not go as
yet, for though it was unnoticed by the others, he
saw that a change for the worse had taken place toward
evening, at a time when all had left the room but the
big, athletic fellow and Marion, they being evidently
left on guard while a short rest was taken.
Paddy was sitting back smoking, with
his eyes half-closed; but he suddenly roused himself
up and came across to the couch.
“How is he getting on?” he whispered.
Chester was silent, and after glancing at him, Marion
spoke
“He is better; sleeping well, and in less pain.”
“Don’t look better,”
grunted the young man, and he glanced at his watch.
“Dinner at eight. Like to go and lie down,
Marion?”
“No,” was the quiet reply.
“All right,” said the
young man, and he walked back to his seat, while Marion
waited for a few moments, and then, gazing wistfully
at Chester, said in a low whisper
“You did not speak. He is better, is he
not?”
The young doctor made no reply, but
sat there breathing hard, as if fascinated.
“I cannot tell you how grateful
I feel to you,” she continued. “Your
coming here has saved poor dear Robert’s life.
I know how strange it all must seem to you, but I we
dare not let you go. It is such a terrible emergency.”
“Yes,” he said softly, “and I have
done my best.”
“But I cannot help reading it
in your eyes, doctor you are thinking of
leaving.”
He started slightly, and then turned
his eyes to his patient so as to avoid the gaze which
held him in spite of the mental struggle against what
seemed to be fate.
“Well,” he said, as he
laid his hand upon the sufferer’s brow, “I
am. Is it not natural? Yes,” he whispered
hoarsely, “by some means I must and will leave
this house to-night.”
Her face grew convulsed, and for a
few moments she was silent. Then in a low, impassioned
whisper, she reached across the couch to lay her hand
upon his arm, the contact seeming to send a hot flush
through every nerve, and he turned to gaze at her
with a look half horror, half delight.
“And you hold his life in your
hands,” she murmured piteously. “What
can I say? what can I do to move you?
Doctor, he is everything to me in this world.
If he died, I could not live.”
“For Heaven’s sake, don’t
look at me don’t speak to me like
that!” he whispered back, and he took her hand
to remove it from his arm, shivering as if it were
some venomous thing; but it turned and clung to his
fast, and was joined by the other. “Madam,
I have done, and am doing, everything I can to save
your husband’s life, and ”
He ceased speaking, for he saw her
lips part in a smile, and her wild eyes grew soft
and humid, as, with a little laugh, she said
“Dearest Rob! My husband!”
Then she loosed the hand she held, laid hers upon
the head of the couch, and bending down she softly
pressed her lips against the patient’s brow,
while a feeling of bitter jealousy sent the blood
surging through Chester’s brain, till the eyes
were turned again to his, and, with a look that sent
every forming manly intention flying to the winds,
she said softly
“Why did you think that?
Doctor, for a poor, pleading woman’s sake,
give up all thought of going. I could not bear
it. There look his face
is growing convulsed,” she whispered in a quick,
agitated tone, “And you talk of going!
He is dying. Robert! Robert! Oh,
doctor, do you not see?”