The old man led the way outside the
house, as though to be rid of his visitor as soon
as possible. This was so obvious that, for an
instant, the Young Doctor was disposed to try conclusions
with the old slaver, and summon him back to the dining-room.
The Mazarine sort of man always roused fighting, masterful
forces in him. He was never averse to a contest
of wills, and he had had much of it; it was inseparable
from his methods of healing. He knew that nine
people out of ten never gave a true history of their
physical troubles, never told their whole story:
first because they had no gift for reporting, no observation;
and also because the physical ailments of many of
them were aggravated or induced by mental anxieties.
Then it was that he imposed himself; as it were, fought
the deceiver and his deceit, or the ignorant one and
his ignorance; and numbers of people, under his sympathetic,
wordless inquiry, poured their troubles into his ears,
as the girl-wife upstairs had tried to do.
When the old man turned to face him
in the sunlight, his boots soiled with dust and manure,
his long upper lip feeling about over the lower lip
and its shaggy growth of beard like some sea-monster
feeling for its prey, the Young Doctor had a sensation
of rancour. His mind flashed to that upstairs
room, where a comely captive creature was lying not
an arm’s length from the coats and trousers
and shabby waistcoats of this barbarian. Somehow
that row of tenantless clothes, and the top-boots,
greased with tallow, standing against the wall, were
more characteristic of the situation than the old
land-leviathan himself, blinking his beady, greenish
eyes at the Young Doctor. That blinking was a
repulsive characteristic; it was like serpents gulping
live things.
“What’s the matter with
her?” the old man asked, jerking his head towards
the upper window.
The Young Doctor explained quickly
the immediate trouble, and then added:
“But it would not have taken
hold of her so if she was not run down. She is
not in a condition to resist. When her system
exhausts, it does not refill, as it were.”
“What sort of dictionary talk
is that? Run down here?” The
old man sniffed the air like an ancient sow.
“Run down in this life, with the
best of food, warm weather, and more ozone than a sailor
gets at sea! It’s an insult to Jéhovah,
such nonsense.”
“Mr. Mazarine,” rejoined
the Young Doctor with ominous determination in his
eye, “you know a good deal, I should think, about
spring wheat and fall ploughing, about making sows
fat, or burning fallow land that’s
your trade, and I shouldn’t want to challenge
you on it all; or you know when to give a horse bran-mash,
or a heifer salt-petre, but well, I know
my job in the same way. They will tell you, about
here, that I have a kind of hobby for keeping people
from digging and crawling into their own graves.
That’s my business, and the habit of saving human
life, because you’re paid for it, becomes in
time a habit of saving human life for its very own
sake. I warn you and perhaps it’s
a matter of some concern to you Mrs. Mazarine
is in a bad way.”
Resentful and incredulous, the old
man was about to speak, but the Young Doctor made
an arresting gesture, and added:
“She has very little strength
to go on with. She ought to be plump; her pulses
ought to beat hard; her cheeks ought to be rosy; she
should walk with a spring and be strong and steady
as a soldier on the march; but she is none of these
things, can do none of these things. You’ve
got a thousand things to do, and you do them because
you want to do them. There is something making
new life in you all the time, but Mrs. Mazarine makes
no new life as she goes on. Every day is taking
something out of her, and there’s nothing being
renewed. Sometimes neither good food nor ozone
is enough; and you’ve got to take care, or you’ll
lose Mrs. Mazarine.” He could not induce
himself to speak of her as “wife.”
For a moment the unwholesome mouth
seemed to be chewing unpleasant herbs, and the beady
eyes blinked viciously.
“I’m not swallowin’
your meaning,” Mazarine said at last. “I
never studied Greek. If a woman has a disease,
there it is, and you can deal with it or not; but
if she hasn’t no disease, then it’s chicanyery chicanyery.
Doctors talk a lot of gibberish these here days.
What I want to know is, has my wife got a disease?
I haven’t seen any signs. Is it Bright’s,
or cancer, or the lungs, or the liver, or the kidneys,
or the heart, or what’s its name?”
The Young Doctor had an impulse to
flay the heathen, but for the girl-wife’s sake
he forbore.
“I don’t think it is any
of those troubles,” he replied smoothly.
“She needs a thorough examination. But
one thing is clear: she is wasting; she is losing
ground instead of going ahead. There’s a
malignant influence working. She’s standing
still, and to stand still in youth is fatal.
I can imagine you don’t want to lose her, eh?”
The Young Doctor’s gray-blue
eyes endeavoured to hold the blinking beads under
the shaggy eyebrows long enough to get control of a
mind which had the cunning and cruelty of an animal.
He succeeded.
The old man would a thousand times
rather his wife lived than died. In the first
place, to lose her was to sacrifice that which he had
paid for dearly a mortgage of ten thousand
dollars torn up. Louise Mazarine represented
that to him first-ten thousand dollars. Secondly,
she was worth it in every way. He had what hosts
of others would be glad to have men younger
and better looking than himself. She represented
the triumph of age. He had lived his life; he
had buried two wives; he had had children; he had
made money; and yet here, when other men of his years
were thinking of making wills, and eating porridge,
and waiting for the Dark Policeman to come and arrest
them for loitering, he was left a magnificent piece
of property like Tralee; and he had all the sources
of pleasure open to a young man walking the primrose
path. He was living right up to the last.
Both his wives were gray-headed when they died it
turned them gray to live with him; both had died before
they were fifty; and here he was the sole owner of
a wonderful young head, with hair that reached to
the waist, with lips like cool fruit from an orchard-tree,
and the indescribable charm of youth and loveliness
which the young themselves never really understood.
That was what he used to say to himself; it was only
age could appreciate youth and beauty; youth did not
understand.
Thus the Young Doctor’s question
roused in him something at once savage and apprehensive.
Of course he wanted Louise to live. Why should
she not live?
“Doesn’t any husband want
his wife to live!” he answered sullenly.
“But I want to know what ails her. What
medicine you going to give her?”
“I don’t know,”
the Young Doctor replied meditatively. “When
she is quite rid of this attack, I’ll examine
her again and let you know.”
Suddenly there shot into the greenish
old eyes a reddish look of rage; jealousy, horrible,
gruesome jealousy, took possession of Joel Mazarine.
This young man to come in and go out of his wife’s
bedroom, to Why weren’t there women
doctors? He would get one over from the Coast,
or from Winnipeg, or else there was old Doctor Gensing,
in Askatoon who was seventy-five at least.
He would call him in and get rid of this offensive
young pill-maker.
“I don’t believe there’s
anything the matter with her,” he declared stubbornly.
“She’s been healthy as a woman can be,
living this life here. What’s her disease?
I’ve asked you. What is it?”
The other laid a hand on himself,
and in the colourless voice of the expert, said:
“Old age that’s her trouble,
so far as I can see.”
He paused, foreseeing the ferocious
look which swept into the repulsive face, and the
clenching of the big hands. Then in a soothing,
reflective kind of voice he added:
“Senile decay you
know all about that. Well, now, it happens sometimes not
often, but it does happen that a very young
person for some cause or another suffers from senile
decay. Some terrible leakage of youth occurs.
It has been cured, though, and I’ve cured one
or two cases myself.”
He was almost prevaricating but
in a good cause. “Mrs. Mazarine’s
is a case which can be cured, I think,” he continued.
“As you’ve remarked, Mr. Mazarine,” his
voice was now persuasive, “here is
fine air, and a good, comfortable home ”
Suddenly he broke off, and as though
in innocent inquiry said: “Now, has she
too much to do? Has she sufficient help in the
house for one so young?”
“She doesn’t do more than’s
good for her,” answered the old man, “and
there’s the half-breed hired critter you’ve
seen her and Li Choo, a Chinaman, too.
That ought to be enough,” he added scornfully.
The Young Doctor seemed to reflect,
and his face became urbane, because he saw he must
proceed warily, if he was to be of service to his new
patient.
“Yes,” he said emphatically,
“she appears to have help enough. I must
think over her case and see her again to-morrow.”
The old man’s look suddenly
darkened. “Ain’t she better:"’
he asked.
“She’s not so much better
that there’s no danger of her being worse,”
the Young Doctor replied decisively. “I
certainly must see her to-morrow.”
“Why,” the old man remarked,
waving his splayed hand up and down in a gesture of
emphasis, “she’s never been sick.
She’s in and out of this house all day.
She goes about with her animals like as if she hadn’t
a care or an ache or pain in the world. I’ve
heard of women that fancied they was sick because
they hadn’t too much to do, and was too well
off, and was treated too well. Highsterics, they
call it. Lots of women, lots and lots of them,
would be glad to have such a home as this, and would
stay healthy in it.”
The Young Doctor felt he had made
headway, and he let it go at that. It was clear
he was to be permitted to come to-morrow. “Yes,
it’s a fine place,” he replied convincingly.
“Three thousand acres is a mighty big place
when you’ve got farm-land as well as cattle-grazing.”
“It’s nearly all good
farm-land,” answered the old man with decision.
“I don’t believe much in ranching or cattle.
I’m for the plough and the wheat. There’s
more danger from cattle disease than from bad crops.
I’m getting rid of my cattle. I expect to
sell a lot of ’em to-day.” An avaricious
smile of satisfaction drew down the corners of his
lips. “I’ve got a good customer.
He ought to be on the trail now.” He drew
out a huge silver watch. “Yes, he’s
due. The party’s a foreigner, I believe.
He lives over at Slow Down Ranch got a French
name.”
“Oh, Giggles!” said the Young Doctor with
a quick smile.
The old man shook his head: “No,
that ain’t the name. It’s Guise-Orlando
Guise is the name.”
“Same thing,” remarked
the Young Doctor. “They call him Giggles
for short. You’ve seen him of course?”
“No, I’ve been dealing
with him so far through a third party. Why’s
he called Giggles?” asked the Master of Tralee.
“Well, you’ll know when
you see him. He’s not cut according to
everybody’s measure. If you’re dealing
with him, don’t think him a fool because he
chirrups, and don’t size him up according to
his looks. He’s a dude. Some call
him The Duke, but mostly he’s known as Giggles.”
“Fools weary me,” grumbled the other.
“Well, as I said, you mustn’t
begin dealing with him on the basis of his looks.
Looks don’t often tell the truth. For instance,
you’re known as a Christian and a Methodist!”
He looked the old man slowly up and down, and in anyone
else it would have seemed gross insolence, but the
urbane smile at his lips belied the malice of his
words. “Well, you know you don’t
look like a Methodist. You look like,” innocence
showed in his eye; there was no ulterior purpose in
his face, “you look like one of the bad McMahon
lot of claim-jumpers over there in the foothills.
I suppose that seems so, only because ranchman aren’t
generally pious. Well, in the same way, Giggles
doesn’t really look like a ranchman; but he’s
every bit as good a ranchman as you are a Christian
and a Methodist!”
The Young Doctor looked the old man
in the face with such a semblance of honesty that
he succeeded in disarming a dangerous suspicion of
mockery dangerous, if he was to continue
family physician at Tralee. “Ah,”
he suddenly remarked, “there comes Orlando now!”
He pointed to a spot about half a mile away, where
a horseman could be seen cantering slowly towards
Tralee.
A moment afterwards, from his buggy,
the Young Doctor said: “Mrs. Mazarine must
be left alone until I see her again. She must
not be disturbed. The half-breed woman can look
after her. I’ve told her what to do.
You’ll keep to another room, of course.”
“There’s a bunk in that
room where I could sleep,” said the other, with
a note of protest.
“I’m afraid that, in our
patient’s interest, you must do what I say,”
the other insisted, with a friendly smile which caused
him a great effort. “If I make her bloom
again, that will suit you, won’t it?”
A look of gloating came into the other’s
eyes: “Let it go at that,” he said.
“Mebbe I’ll take her over to the sea before
the wheat-harvest.”
Out on the Askatoon trail, the Young
Doctor ruminated over what he had seen and heard at
Tralee. “That old geezer will get an awful
jolt one day,” he said to himself. “If
that girl should wake! Her eyes if
somebody comes along and draws the curtains! She
hasn’t the least idea of where she is or what
it all means. All she knows is that she’s
a prisoner in some strange, savage country and doesn’t
know its language or anybody at all as
though she’d lost her memory. Any fellow,
young, handsome and with enough dash and colour to
make him romantic could do it.... Poor little
robin in the snow!” he added, and looked back
towards Tralee.
As he did so, the man from Slow Down
Ranch cantering towards Tralee caught his eye.
“Louise-Orlando,” he said musingly; then,
with a sudden flick of the reins on his horse’s
back, he added abruptly, almost sternly, “By
the great horn spoons, no!”
Thus when his prophecy took concrete
form, he revolted from it. A grave look came
into his face.