Those two women managed, somehow,
to get the almost helpless stranger into the house,
where Auntie Sue, after providing him with nightclothes,
left by one of her guests, by tactful entreaty and
judicial commands, persuaded him to go to bed.
Then followed several days and nights
of weary watching. There were times when the
man lay with closed eyes, so weak and exhausted that
he seemed to be drifting out from these earthly shores
on the deep waters of that wide and unknown sea into
which all the streams of life finally flow. But,
always, Auntie Sue miraculously held him back.
There were other times when, by all the rules of the
game, he should have worn a strait-jacket; when
his delirium filled the room with all manner of horrid
creatures from the pit; when leering devils and loathsome
serpents and gibbering apes tormented him until his
unnatural strength was the strength of a fiend, and
his tortured nerves shrieked in agony. But Auntie
Sue perversely ignored the rules of the game.
And never did the man, even in his most terrible moments,
fail to recognize in the midst of the hellish crew
of his diseased imagination the silvery-haired old
teacher as the angel of his salvation. Her gentle
voice had always power to soothe and calm him.
He obeyed her implicitly, and, like a frightened child,
holding fast to her hand would beg piteously for her
to protect and save him.
But no word of the man’s low-muttered,
broken sentences, nor of his wildest ravings, ever
gave Auntie Sue a clue to his identity. She searched
his clothes, but there was not a thing to give her
even his name.
And, yet, that first day, when Judy
would have gone to neighbor Tom’s for help,
Auntie Sue said “No.” She even positively
forbade the girl to mention the stranger’s presence
in the house, should she chance to talk with passing
neighbors. “The river brought him to us,
Judy, dear,” she said. “We must save
him. No one shall know his shame, to humiliate
and wound his pride and drag him down after he is
himself again. Until he has recovered and is
once more the man I believe him to be, no one must
see him or know that he is here; and no one must ever
know how he came to us.”
And late, one evening, when Judy was
fast asleep, and the man was lying very still after
a period of feverish tossing and muttering, the dear
old gentlewoman crept quietly out of the house into
the night. She was gone some time, and when she
returned again to the stranger’s bedside she
was breathless and trembling as from some unusual exertion.
And the following afternoon, when Judy came to her
with the announcement that the boat which had brought
the man to them was no longer in the eddy below the
garden, Auntie Sue said, simply, that she was glad
it was gone, and cautioned the girl, again, that the
stranger’s presence in the house must not be
made known to any one.
When the mountain girl protested,
saying, “You-all ain’t got no call ter
be a-wearin’ yourself ter the bone a-takin’
care of such as him,” Auntie Sue answered, “Hush,
Judy! How do you know what the poor boy really
is?”
To which Judy retorted: “He’s
just triflin’ an’ ornery an’ no ’count,
that’s what he is, or he sure wouldn’t
been a-floatin’ ’round in that there old
John-boat ‘thout ary gun, or fishin’ lines,
or hat even, ter say nothin’ of that there whisky
bottle bein’ plumb empty.”
Auntie Sue made no reply to the mountain
girl’s harsh summing-up of the damning evidence
against the stranger, but left her and went softly
to the bedside of their guest.
It was perhaps an hour later that
Judy, quietly entering the room, happened upon a scene
that caused her to stand as if rooted to the spot
in open-mouthed amazement.
The man was sleeping, and the silvery-haired
old maiden-lady, seated on the side of the bed, was
bending over the unconscious stranger and gently stroking
his tumbled, red-brown hair, even as a mother might
lovingly caress her sleeping child. And then,
as Judy watched, breathless with wonder, the proud
old gentlewoman, bending closer over that still form
on the bed, touched her lips soft as a rose-petal to
the stranger’s brow.
When she arose and saw Judy standing
there, Auntie Sue’s delicate old cheeks flushed
with color, and her eyes were shining. With a
gesture, she commanded the girl to silence, and the
two tiptoed from the room. When they were outside,
and Auntie Sue had cautiously closed the door, she
faced the speechless Judy with a deliciously defiant
air that could not wholly hide her lovely confusion.
“I I was
thinking, Judy, how he how he might
have been my son.”
“Your ’son’!”
ejaculated the girl. “Why, ma’m, you-all
ain’t never even been married, as I’ve
ever hearn tell, have you?”
Auntie Sue drew her thin shoulders
proudly erect, and, lifting her fine old face, answered
the challenging question with splendid spirit:
“No, I have never been married; but I might
have been; and if I had, I suppose I could have had
a son, couldn’t I?”
The vanquished Judy retreated to the
kitchen, where, in safety, she sank into a chair,
convulsed with laughter, which she instinctively muffled
in her apron.
Then came the day when the man, weak
and worn with his struggle, looked up at his gentle
old nurse with the light of sanity in his deep blue
eyes. Very tired eyes they were, and filled with
painful memories, filled, too, with worshipping
gratitude and wonder.
She smiled down at him with delighted
triumph, and drawing a chair close beside the bed,
seated herself and placed her soft hand on his where
it lay on the coverlid.
“You are much better, this morning,”
she said cheerily. “You will soon be all
right, now.” And as she looked into the
eyes that regarded hers so questioningly, there was
in her face and manner no hint of doubt, or pretense,
or reproach; only confidence and love.
He spoke slowly, as if feeling for
words: “I have been in Hell; and you you
have brought me out. Why did you do it?”
“Because you are mine,”
she answered, with her low chuckling laugh. It
was so good to have him able to talk to her rationally
after those long hours of fighting.
“Because I am yours?”
he repeated, puzzling over her words.
“Yes,” she returned, with
a hint of determined proprietorship in her voice;
“because you belong to me. You see, that
eddy where your boat landed is my property, and so
anything that drifts down the river and lodges there
belongs to me. Whatever the river brings to me,
is mine. The river brought you, and so ”
She finished with another laugh, a laugh
that was filled with tender mother-yearning.
The blue eyes smiled back at her for
a moment; then she saw them darken with painful memories.
“Oh, yes; the river,”
he said. “I wanted the river to do something
for me, and and it did something quite
different from what I wanted.”
“Of course,” she returned,
eagerly, “the river is always like that.
It always does the thing you don’t expect it
to do. Just like life itself. Don’t
you see? It begins somewhere away off at some
little spring, and just keeps going and going and
going; and thousands and thousands of other springs,
scattered all over the country, start streams and creeks
and branches that run into it, and make it bigger and
bigger, as it winds and curves and twists along, until
it finally reaches the great sea, where its waters
are united with all the waters from all the rivers
in all the world. And in all of its many, many
miles, from that first tiny spring to the sea, there
are not two feet of it exactly alike. In all
the centuries of its being, there are never two hours
alike. An infinite variety of days and nights an
infinite variety of skies and light and clouds and
daybreaks and sunsets an infinite number
and variety of currents and shoals and deep places
and quiet spots and dangerous rapids and eddies and,
along its banks, an endless change of hills and mountains
and flats and forests and meadows and farms and cities and ”
She paused, breathless. And then, when he did
not speak, but only watched her, she continued:
“Don’t you see? Of course, the river
never could be what you expect, any more than life
could be exactly what you want and dream it will be.”
“Who in the world are you?”
he asked, wonderingly. “And what in the
world are you doing here in the backwoods?”
Smiling at his puzzled expression,
she answered: “I am Auntie Sue. I am
living here in the backwoods.”
“But, your real name? Won’t
you tell me your name? I must know how to address
you.”
Oh, my name is Susan E. Wakefield miss
Wakefield, if you please. I shall be seventy-one
years old the eighteenth day of next November.
And you must call me ’Auntie Sue,’ just
as every one else does.”
“Wakefield Wakefield where
have I seen that name?” He wrinkled his brow
in an effort to remember. “Wakefield I
feel sure that I have heard it, somewhere.”
“It is not unlikely,”
she returned, lightly. “It is not at all
an uncommon name. And now that I am properly
introduced, don’t you think ?”
He hesitated a moment, then said,
deliberately, “My name is Brian Kent.”
“That is an Irish name,”
she said quickly; “and that is why your hair
is so nearly red and your eyes so blue.”
“Yes,” he returned, “from
my mother. And please don’t ask me more
now, for I can’t lie to you, and I won’t
tell you the truth.” And she saw, again,
the dark shadows of painful memories come into the
blue eyes.
Bending over the bed, she laid her
soft hand on his brow, and pushed back his heavy hair;
and her sweet old voice was very low and gentle as
she said: “My dear boy, I shall never ask
you more. The river brought you to me, and you
are mine. You must not even think of anything
else, just now. When you are stronger, and are
ready, we will talk of your future; but of your past,
you
A loud knock sounded at the door of the living room.
“There is someone at the door,”
she said hastily. “I must go. Lie still,
and go to sleep like a good boy; won’t you?”
Swiftly, she leaned over, and, before
he realized, he felt her lips touch his forehead.
Then she was gone, and Brian Kent’s Irish eyes
were filled with tears. Turning to the wall,
he hid his face in the pillow.