DOCTOR AND NURSE.
The old lawyer ran from the door with
an alacrity not to be expected in one of his years,
and returned directly with the key that he had found
in his table.
“Give it to me,” said
Artis huskily, and snatching the key he tried to insert
it, but his hand trembled so that he did not succeed,
and the next moment he shrank away.
“Here, open that door, Preenham,” he said.
“I daren’t, sir, I daren’t indeed.Ah, poor young man!”
“Give me the key,” said
the old lawyer firmly, and taking it, he tried the
door, to find that the lock had been tampered with,
so that it was some minutes before he could get it
to move.
“Hadn’t I better fetch the police, sir?”
faltered the butler.
“No; stop,” said the old
lawyer, turning the handle.“There is some
one against the door.”
He pushed hard, and with some effort
got it open so that he could have squeezed in.
“It is all dark,” he said.“No it is the curtain,” and forcing his
way through, he drew back the hangings from the window.
“It’s poor Capel dead!”
whispered Artis, who had followed.“Here,
Preenham, come in,” he cried angrily.“Oh,
how horrible poor lad!”
The lawyer saw the naked sword lying
on the carpet; that the drawers and cabinet had been
ransacked; and that the window was not quite shut down.
He took this in at a glance as he
ran to where Capel lay close to the door, where he
had dragged himself sometime during the early hours
of the morn, to lie exhausted after vainly trying
to raise the alarm.
“He’s dead, sir, dead!” groaned
the butler.
“Hush!” cried the old
lawyer harshly.“He’s not dead.Mr Artis, you are young and active.Quick.That doctor, Mr Heston.You know where he lives.You, Preenham, brandy.Stop.Tell the
ladies Mr Capel is ill.Nothing more.Don’t spread the alarm.”
“Is anything very serious the
matter?” said a voice at the door.
“Yes no, my dear.Go away now,” cried the old lawyer, “Mr
Capel is ill.”
“There is something terribly
wrong again,” said a deeper voice, and, white
as ashes and closely followed by Katrine, Lydia came
in.
She uttered a faint cry, and then
wrested herself from Artis, who tried to stop her.
“No,” she cried, imperiously,
changed as it were in an instant from a shivering
girl into a thoughtful woman.“Quick:go for help.Mr Girtle, what can I do?”
“Yes, let me help too,”
said Katrine.“What is it; has he tried
to kill himself?”
“No,” cried Lydia, turning
upon her fiercely.“He was too true a man.”
“I’m afraid there has
been an attempt made by burglars,” said the old
lawyer, “and that our young friend has been trying
to defend the place; but but he was locked
in here the key was in my table and and I’m
afraid I’m growing very old things
seem so much confused now.”
He put his hand to his head for a
few moments and looked helplessly from one to the
other.Then his customary sang froid seemed
to have returned.
“This is not a sight for you,
ladies,” he said.“Pray go back.”
“I am not afraid, Mr Girtle,”
said Katrine, with a slight shudder as she looked
eagerly about the room.
For her answer, Lydia took water from
the wash-stand, and began to bathe the blood-smeared
face, kneeling down by Capel’s side.
Just then Preenham entered with decanter
and glass, the former clattering against the latter,
as he poured out some of the contents.
Holding a little of the brandy to
Capel’s clenched teeth, Mr Girtle managed to
trickle through a few drops at a time, while Lydia
continued the bathing, and Katrine stood, like some
beautiful statue, gazing down at them with wrinkled
brow and clasped hands.
By this time, the knowledge that something
was wrong had reached the women-servants, and they
had both come to the door.
“No, no; keep them away, Preenham,”
said Mr Girtle, in answer to offers of assistance.“You go down, too, and be at the door, ready
to let the doctor in.”
“Yes, sir, I will,” said
the old butler, piteously; “but my young master will
he live?”
“Please God!” said the lawyer simply.
“But he is not dead, sir?”
“There is your answer, man,”
said Mr Girtle, for just then Capel uttered a low
moan.
The old butler bent down on one knee,
and Lydia darted at him a grateful look, as she saw
him lift and press one cold hand, and then, laying
it down, he rose, and went out of the room on tiptoe,
raising his hands and his face towards Heaven.
“Was he stabbed with
that sword?” said Lydia, in a hoarse whisper.
“No, I think not.The
doctor must soon be here,” was the reply.
In fact, five minutes later there
was a quick knock at the door, and Dr Heston hurried
in, followed by Artis.
“Give me the room,” he
said quickly.“Ladies, please go.”
Katrine turned slowly, and glanced at Lydia.
“I may stay, Doctor Heston,” she said.“I may be of use.”
“No words now,” he said,
sharply.“By-and-by you will be invaluable.Well there, stay.”
He had thrown off his coat and rolled
up his sleeves as he spoke, and as Lydia bent her
head and stood waiting, Katrine left the room.Then the deft-handed medico was busy with his examination.
“Head literally scored with a bullet,”
he said.
“Not a cut?” whispered Mr Girtle, pointing
to the sword.
“Bless me, no.Scored
by a bullet.An inch lower hallo!What have we here?”
He took out a knife and cut through
the clothes, where he could not draw them away from
where the blood had oozed out just below the left
shoulder.
“Hah!Yes!Bullet.Entered here; passed out.No!Here it
is.Just below the skin.”
He had raised the sufferer, and found
that the bullet had passed nearly through, and was
visible so near the surface that a slight cut would
have given it exit.
“Nothing vital touched, I think,”
said the doctor, busying himself about the wound in
the shoulder.
“Ah!That’s right,
madam.Nothing like a woman’s hand, after
all, about a sick man.Why, this must have happened
hours ago.”
The doctor chatted away, quickly,
but his hands kept time with his voice.He had
laid down a small case of instruments with a roll of
linen, and turning from the arm once more, he rapidly
clipped away the hair, and dressed the wound in the
head, a wound so horrible that Artis shuddered, turned
to the brandy decanter that the old butler stood holding
with a helpless, dazed look, and poured out a good
dram, while Lydia knelt there, very pale, but calmly
holding scissors, lint or strapping, to hand as they
were required.
“Now for the bullet,”
said the doctor in a cheerful, airy way.“Mr
Artis, just lend a hand here.Or, no; you look
upset.Put down that decanter, butler!This isn’t a dinner-party.That’s
right.Now kneel down here.”
He softly raised Capel, and placed
him in a convenient position before turning to Lydia.
“Really, I think you would prefer to go now?”
The girl’s lips seemed to tighten and she shook
her head.
“As you please;” said
the doctor testily.“I have no time to
waste.A little back, Mr Girtle; I want all
the light I can have.Yes, that’s plain
enough,” he muttered, as with one hand resting
on the injured man’s shoulder where the bullet
made quite a little lump, he stretched out the other,
and from where it nestled in the case, fitted amongst
so much purple velvet, he took out a small knife.
There was a pleasant look of satisfaction
in the doctor’s face, as he took out the knife,
but the next moment he turned with an angry flash
upon Lydia.
It was the natural instinctive act
of one who loves seeking to protect the object loved.For as Dr Heston took the knife in his hand, Lydia’s
eyes dilated, and she leaned forward, caught the doctor’s
arm, and gazed at the keen little blade with dilated
eyes.
“My dear young lady, are you
mad?” cried the doctor, testily.
She raised her eyes to his in a look
so full of appeal, that he could read it as easily
as if she had given it with the interpretation of
words.
He was not accustomed to argue in
a case like this, but the girl’s loving attempt
to protect the insensible man, touched him to the heart;
and dropping his sharp, imperious manner, he said gently:
“But, don’t you see?It is to do
him good.”
Lydia’s hand trembled, but she still grasped
the doctor’s arm.
“Come, come,” he said,
smiling.“You must not be alarmed.Do you want the bullet to stay in and irritate the
whole length of the wound?”
She gave her head a sharp shake.
“Well, then, be sensible, my
dear girl.There, get me a bit of lint,”
he continued, “and you shall see how easily and
well I will do this.That’s better.Why, taking a tooth out is ten times worse.This is a mere trifle.There, that’s a
brave little woman.He will not even feel it.”
Lydia’s hand had dropped from
the doctor’s arm, and she drew a long breath,
watching him as if her eyes were drawn to his knife,
while he bent over Capel.
In a few minutes more the patient
was lifted upon the bed, and Lydia stood there with
her hands clasped in dread, for it seemed ominous to
her that Capel should be compelled to lie there.
“Can he not be taken up to his room?”
“No, my brave little nurse,
no.It would have been extremely nice for him,
but what he requires now is absolute rest and quiet.Come, come.You are too strong-minded a little
woman to be superstitious.Go where you will,
in old houses, there has generally been a death in
some of the bedrooms; but believe me, that does not
affect the living.Why, if that were the case,
what should we do at the hospitals?You are going
to install yourself here, then, as nurse?That’s
right.Let my instructions be carried out, and
I’ll come in again at noon.”
Whispered conversation went on all
through the house that day, but though there had been
the attempt at burglary, Mr Girtle hesitated about
calling in the police again, and on consulting the
doctor, he quite agreed that it would be better not
to have them there.
“It will only disturb my patient,”
he said, “and, depend upon it, with a light
and people sitting up, the scoundrels will not come
again.”
“Well,” said Mr Girtle,
“we will not communicate with the police at
present.”
The doctor came in at one, and again
at five; and, on leaving, looked rather serious.
“If he is not different to this
at about nine, when I come in again, I’ll get
Sir Ronald Mackenzie to see him.I’ll warn
him at once that he may be wanted.”
“Then you think his case serious?”
“Brain injuries always are.”
At nine o’clock, when the doctor
came, his manner startled Lydia, who had patiently
watched the sufferer all day.
“Yes,” he said; “I
will have Sir Ronald’s opinion.I shall
be back in half-an-hour.”
He left the room and hurried down-stairs,
while Lydia bent down and laid her cheek against the
patient’s burning hand.He was delirious
now, and talking loudly and rapidly.
“Yes, it is there,” he
kept on saying.“Count four stones from
the left, press on the fifth, and it will swing around.I have it safely do you hear? safely.”
This went on over and over again,
and as Lydia listened, something, she knew not what,
made her turn her head, when it seemed to her that
one of the bed curtains trembled, and that, in the
gloom, a hand was softly drawing one back, that the
sick man’s words might be more plainly heard.