“You look glorious. What’s
the special programme you’ve laid out for this
morning, Sue?” said Susanna’s husband,
coming upon her in her rose garden early on a certain
perfect October morning.
“I feel glorious too”
young Mrs. Fairfax said, returning his kiss and dropping
basket and scissors to bestow all her attention upon
his buttonhole rose. “There is no special
occasion for all this extravagance,” she added,
giving a complacent downward glance at the filmy embroideries
of her gown, and her small whiteshod feet. “In
fact, to-day breaks before me a long and delicious
blank. I don’t know when I have had such
a Saturday. I shall write letters this morning — or
perhaps wash my hair — I don’t know.
And then I’ll take Mrs. Elliot for a drive this
afternoon, or take some fruit to the Burkes, maybe,
and stop for tea at the club. And if you decide
to dine in town, I’ll have Emma set my dinner
out on the porch and commence my new Locke. And
if you can beat that programme for sheer idle bliss,”
said Susanna, “let me hear you do it!”
She finished fastening his rose, stepped
back to survey it, and raised to his eyes her own
joyous, honest blue eyes, which still were as candid
as a nice child’s. Jim Fairfax, keenly alive
to the delight of it, even after six months of marriage,
kissed her again.
“You know, Jim,” said
Susanna, when they were presently sauntering with
their load of roses toward the house and breakfast,
“apropos of this new dress, I believe I put
it on just because there was no real reason for
it. It is so delightful sometimes to get into
dainty petties, and silk stockings, and a darling
new gown, just as a matter of course! All my
life, you know, I’ve had just one good outfit
at a time, and sometimes less than that, and all the
things I wore every day were so awfully plain !”
“I know, my darling,”
Jim said, a little gravely. For he was always
sorry to remember that there had been long years of
poverty and struggle in Susanna’s life before
the day when he had found her, an underpaid librarian
in a dark old law library, in a dark old street.
Susanna, buoyant, ambitious, and overworked, had never
stopped in her hard daily round long enough to consider
herself pitiful, but she could look back from her
rose garden now to the days before she knew Jim, and
join him in a little shudder of reminiscence.
“I don’t believe a long,
idle day will ever seem anything but a joyous holiday
to me,” she said now. “It seems so
curious still, not to be expected anywhere every morning!”
“Well, you may as well get used
to it,” Jim told her smilingly. But a few
minutes later, when Susanna was busy with the coffee-pot,
he looked up from a letter to say: “Here’s
a job for you, after all, to-day, Sue! This — ”
and he flattened the crackling sheets beside his plate,
“this is from old Thayer.”
“Thayer himself?” Susanna
echoed appreciatively. For old Whitman Thayer,
in whose hands lay the giving of contracts far larger
than any that had as yet been handled by Jim or his
senior partners in the young firm of Reid, Polk &
Fairfax, Architects, was naturally an enormously important
figure in his and Susanna’s world. They
spoke of Thayer nearly every night, Jim reporting
to his interested wife that Thayer had “come
in,” or “hadn’t come in,” that
Thayer had “seemed pleased,” that Thayer
had “jumped” on this, or had “been
tickled to death” with that; and the Fairfax
domestic barometer varied accordingly.
“Go on, Jim,” said Susanna, in suspense.
“Why, it seems that his wife — she’s
awfully sweet and nice,” Jim proceeded, “is
coming into town this afternoon, and she wonders if
it would be too much trouble for Mrs. Fairfax to come
in and lunch with her and help her with some shopping.”
“Jim, it doesn’t say that!”
But Susanna’s eyes were kindling with joy at
the thought. “Oh, Jim, what a chance!
Doesn’t that look as if he really liked you!”
“Liked you, you mean,”
Jim said, giving her the letter. “Now I
call that a very friendly, decent thing for them to
do,” young Mr. Fairfax went on musingly.
“If you and she like each other, Sue — ”
“Oh, don’t worry, we will!”
Mrs. Fairfax was always sure of her touch upon a feminine
heart.
“Wonder why he didn’t
think of Mrs. Reid or Mrs. Polk?” said Jim.
“Oh, Jim, they are sort of — stiff,
don’t you know?” Susanna returned to her
coffee, seasoning Jim’s cup carefully before
she added, with a look of naïve pleasure that Jim
thought very charming: “You know I rather
thought that Mr. Thayer liked me just that one
day I saw him!”
“Well, you’ll like her,”
Jim prophesied. “She’s very sweet
and gentle, not very strong. They live right
up the line there somewhere. She rarely comes
into town. Old Thayer is devoted to her, and he
always seems — ” Jim hesitated.
“I don’t know,” he went on, “I
may be all wrong about this, Sue, but Thayer always
seems to be protecting her, don’t you know?
I don’t imagine he’d want to run her up
against society women like Jane Reid and Mrs. Polk.
You’re younger and less affected; you’re
approachable. I don’t know, but it seems
to me that way. Anyway,” he finished with
supreme satisfaction, “I wouldn’t take
anything in the world for this chance! It shows
the old man is really in earnest.”
“He says she’ll be at
the office at eleven,” said Susanna. “That
means I must get the ten twenty-two.”
“Sure. And take a taxi
when you get to town. Got money? Got the
right clothes?”
“Hydrangea hat,” Susanna
decided aloud. “New pongee, and pongee coat
hung in careless elegance over my arm. As the
last chime of eleven rings I will step into your office — ”
“I hope to goodness you will!”
said Jim, with an anxious look. “You’ll
really get there, won’t you, Sue? No slips?”
This might have seemed overemphatic
to an unprejudiced outsider. But no one who really
knew Susanna would have blamed her young husband for
an utter disbelief in the likelihood of her getting
anywhere at any given time. Susanna’s one
glaring fault was a cheerful indifference to the fixed
plans of others. Engagements she forgot, ignored,
or cancelled at the last minute; dinner guests, arriving
at her lovely home, never dreamed how often the consternation
of utter surprise was hidden under the hilarious greetings
of hostess and host. Dressmakers and dentists
charged Susanna mercilessly for forgotten appointments;
but an adoring circle of friends had formed a sort
of silent conspiracy to save her from herself, and
socially she suffered much less than she deserved.
“But some day you’ll get
an awful jolt; you’ll get the lesson of your
life, Sue,” Jim used to say, and Susanna always
answered meekly:
“Oh, Jim, I know it!”
“My mother used to have a nursery
rhyme about me,” she told Jim on one occasion.
“It was one of those ‘A is for Amiable
Annie’ things, you know; ’K is for Kind
little Katie, whose weight is one hundred and eighty’ — you’ve
heard them, of course? Well, ’S was for
Shiftless Susanna.’ I know the next line
was, ’But such was the charm of her manner’ — but
I’ve forgotten the rest. Whether mother
made that up for my especial benefit or not, I don’t
know.”
“Well, you have the charm all
right,” Jim was obliged to confess, for Susanna
had an undeniable genius for adjustment and placation.
Nobody was angry long at Susanna, perhaps because
so many other people were always ready to step in
gladly and fill any gaps in her programme. She
was too popular to be snubbed. And her excuses
were always so reasonable!
“You know I simply lose my mind
at the telephone,” she would plead. “I
accept anything then — it never occurs to
me that we may have engagements!” Or, “Well,
the Jacksons said Thursday,” she would brilliantly
elucidate, “and Mrs. Oliver said the twentieth,
and it never occurred to me that it was the same
day!”
And she was always willing — this
was the maddening part of Susanna! — to own
herself entirely in the wrong, and always ended any
conversation on the subject with a cheerful:
“But anyway, I’m improving, you admit
that, don’t you, Jim? I’m not nearly
as bad as I used to be!”
She said now very seriously:
“Jim, darling, you may depend upon me. I
realize what this means, and I am perfectly delighted
to have the chance. At eleven to-day, ‘one
if by land, and two if by sea,’ I’ll be
at your office. Trust me!”
“I do, dearest,” Jim said.
And he went down the drive a little later, under the
blazing glory of the maples with great content in his
heart. Susanna, going about her pretty house
briskly, felt so sure of herself that the day’s
good work seemed half accomplished already.
She had adjusted the skirt of the
pongee suit, and pinned the hydrangea hat at a fascinating
angle when the telephone rang.
Susanna slipped her bare arms into
the stiff sleeves of a Mandarin coat and crossed the
hall to the instrument.
“Hello, Susanna!” said
the cheerful voice of young Mrs. Harrington, a neighbor
and friend, at the other end of the telephone.
“I just rang up to know if I could come over
early and help you out with anything and whether — ”
“Help me out with anything?”
Mrs. Fairfax’s voice ranged through delicate
shades of surprise to dawning consternation. “Help
me out with what?”
“Why, you told me yourself that
this was the day of the bridge-club lunch at your
house!” Mrs. Harrington said, almost indignantly.
But immediately she became mirthful. “Oh,
Susanna, Susanna! You haven’t forgotten — oh,
you have! Oh, you poor girl, what will you
do! Listen, I could bring a — ”
“Oh, my goodness, Ethel — and
I’ve got to go to town!” Susanna’s
tone was hushed with a sort of horror. “And
those seven women will be here at half-past twelve!
And not one thing in the house — ”
“Oh, you could get Ludovici
as far as the lunch goes, Sue. But the girls
will think it’s odd, perhaps. Couldn’t
you wait and take the one o’clock?”
“Yes, I’ll get Ludovici,”
Susanna decided hastily. “No, I couldn’t
do that. But I’ll tell you what I could
do. If you’ll be an angel, Ethel, and do
the honors until I get here, I could lunch early, get
through my business in town, and get the one-fifty
train for home — ”
“Well, that’ll be all
right. I’ll explain,” said the amiable
Mrs. Harrington.
A few minutes later Mrs. Fairfax left
the telephone and went down to the kitchen to explain
to Emma and Veronica, the maids, that there would
be a luncheon for eight ladies served by a caterer,
in her home, that day, and that they must simply assist
him. She herself must be in town unfortunately,
but Mrs. Harrington had very kindly offered to come
over and be hostess and play the eighth hand of bridge
afterward. Emma and Veronica, perhaps more hardened
to these emergencies than are ordinary maids, rose
to the occasion, and Susanna hurried off to her train
satisfied that as far as the actual luncheon was concerned,
all would go well. But what the seven women would
think was another story!
“I don’t suppose Mrs.
Thayer wants to do so very much shopping,” said
Susanna to herself, hurrying along. “If
I meet her at eleven and we lunch at one, say, I don’t
see why I shouldn’t get the one-fifty train
home. I’d get here before the girls had
fairly started playing bridge, and explain — somehow
one can always explain things so much better in person — ”
“Or suppose we lunched at half-past
twelve,” her uneasy thoughts ran on. “That
gives us an hour and a half to shop — that
ought to be plenty. But we mustn’t lose
a minute getting started! Mrs. Thayer will come
up in her motor — that will save us time.
We can start right off the instant I get to Jim’s
office.”
She stopped at the caterer’s
for a brief but satisfactory interview. The caterer
was an artist, but his enthusiasms this morning were
wasted upon Susanna.
“Yes, yes — cucumber
sandwiches by all means,” she assented hastily,
“and the ices — just as you like!
Plain, I think — or did you say in cases?
I don’t care. Only don’t fail me,
Mr. Ludovici.”
Fail her? Mr. Ludovici’s
lexicon did not know the word. Susanna breathed
more freely as she crossed the sunny village street
to the train.
The station platform was deserted
and bare. Susanna, accustomed to a breathless
late arrival, could saunter with delightful leisure
to the ticket-seller’s window.
“You’ve not forgotten
the new time-table?” said the agent, pleasantly,
when they had exchanged greetings.
“Oh, does the change begin to-day?” Susanna
looked blank.
“October sixteenth, winter schedule,”
he reminded her buoyantly. “Going to be
lots of engagements missed to-day!”
“But mine is very important
and I cannot miss it,” said Susanna, displeased
at his levity. “I must be in Mr. Fairfax’s
office at eleven.”
“You won’t be more than
ten or twelve minutes late,” said young Mr.
Green, consolingly. “You tell Mr. Fairfax
it’s up to the N.Y. and E.W.”
Susanna smiled perfunctorily, but
took her place in the train with a sinking heart.
She would be late, of course, and Jim would be angry,
of course. Late to-day, when every minute counted
and the programme allowed for not an instant’s
delay! Her eyes on the flying countryside, she
rehearsed her part, found herself eloquently explaining
to a pacified Jim, capturing a gracious Mrs. Thayer,
successfully reaching home again, and explaining to
an entirely amiable bridge club.
It could be done, of course, but it
meant a pretty full day! Susanna’s mind
reverted uneasily to the consideration that she had
already bungled matters. Oh, well, if she was
late, she was late, that was all; and if Jim was furious,
why, Jim would simply have to be furious! And
she began her explanations again —
After all, it was but fifteen minutes
past eleven when she walked into her husband’s
office. But neither Jim nor Mrs. Thayer was there.
“Mr. Fairfax went out not three
minutes ago,” said the pretty stenographer in
the outer office. Susanna, brought to a full stop,
stared at her blankly.
“Went out!”
“Yes, with Mrs. Thayer to the
dentist. He said to say he was afraid you had
missed your train. There’s a note.”
The note was forthwith produced.
Susanna read it frowningly. It was rather conspicuously
headed “Eleven-twelve!”
Dearest girl: Can’t
wait any longer. Mrs. T. must see her dentist
(Archibald). I’m taking her up. Thayers
and we lunch at the Palace at one-thirty. Wait
for me in my office. J. F.
“Oh, what is the matter with
everything to-day!” Susanna burst out in exasperation.
“He’s wild, of course. When does he
ever sign himself ’J. F.’ to me!
When did they go?” she asked Miss Perry, briefly,
with an unreasonable wish that she might somehow hold
that irreproachable young woman responsible.
“Just about three minutes ago,”
said Miss Perry. “He said that if you had
missed your train, you wouldn’t be here for more
than an hour, and it was no use waiting.”
“You see, it was a changed time-table,
and he forgot it just as I did,” explained Susanna,
pleased to find him fallible, even to that extent.
“But he was on time,” fenced Miss
Perry, innocently.
“They don’t change the
business trains,” Susanna said coldly. And
she decided that she disliked this girl. She
opened a magazine and sat down by the open window.
The minutes ticked slowly by.
The telephone rang, doors opened and shut, and men
came and went through the office. Susanna, opposed
in every fibre of her being to passive waiting, suddenly
rose.
“Dr. Archibald is in the First
National Bank Building, isn’t he?” she
inquired. “I think I’ll join Mrs.
Thayer up there. There’s no use in my waiting
here.”
Miss Perry silently verified Dr. Archibald’s
address in the telephone book, and to the First National
Bank Building Susanna immediately made her way.
It was growing warmer now and the streets seemed noisy
and crowded, but no matter — “If I
can only get to them and see Jim!” thought
Susanna.
In the pleasant shadiness of Dr. Archibald’s
office, rising from a delightful mahogany arm-chair,
Susanna presently asked if Mrs. Thayer could be told
that Mrs. Fairfax was there.
“I think Mrs. Thayer is gone,”
said the attendant pleasantly. “I’m
not sure, but I’ll see.”
In a few minutes she returned to inform
Mrs. Fairfax that Mrs. Thayer had just come in to
have a bridge replaced, and was gone.
“You don’t know where?”
Susanna’s voice was a trifle husky with repressed
emotion. She realized that she was getting a headache.
No, the attendant didn’t know where.
So there was nothing for it but to
go back to Jim’s office, and back Susanna accordingly
went. She walked as fast as she could, conscious
of every separate hot step, and was nervous and headachy
when she entered Miss Perry’s presence again.
Mr. Fairfax and Mrs. Thayer had not
come in; no, but Miss Perry reported that Mr. Fairfax
had telephoned not ten minutes ago, and seemed very
anxious to get hold of his wife.
“Oh, dear, dear!” lamented
Susanna. “And where is he now?”
Miss Perry couldn’t say.
“I wrote his message down,” she said, with
sympathetic amusement at Susanna’s crushed dismay.
And, referring to her notes, she repeated it:
“Mr. Fairfax said that Mrs.
Thayer had had an appointment to see a sick friend
in a hospital this afternoon. But she has gone
right out there now instead, so that you and she can
go shopping after lunch. You are, please, to
meet Mr. Fairfax and the Thayers at the Palace for
luncheon at half-past one; there’ll be a table
reserved. Mr. Fairfax has a little business to
attend to just now, but if you don’t mind waiting
in the office, he thinks it’s the coolest place
you could be. He wanted to know if you had the
whole afternoon free — ”
“Oh, absolutely!” Susanna
assented eagerly. This was not the time to speak
or think of the bridge club.
“And that was all,” finished
Miss Perry, “except he said perhaps you would
like to look at the plans of the orphanage. Mr.
Fairfax got them out to show to Mr. Thayer this afternoon.
I can get them for you.”
“Oh, thank you! I do want
to see them!” said Susanna, gratefully.
And she established herself comfortably by the open
window, the orphanage plans, a stiff roll of blue
paper, in her lap, her idle eyes following the noonday
traffic in the street below.
What a shame to have to sit here doing
nothing, to-day of all days, for nearly two hours!
Susanna thought. Why, she could have met her luncheon
guests, seen that the meal was at least under way,
apologized in person, and then started for town.
As it was, they might be angry, and no wonder!
And these were her neighbors and very good friends,
after all, the women upon whose good feeling half
the joy of her country home and garden depended.
It was too bad!
She glanced at the blue-prints, but
one of her sudden inspirations turned the page blank.
What time was it? Ten minutes of twelve.
She referred to her new timetable. Ten minutes
of — why, she could just catch the noon train,
rush home, meet her guests, explain, and come back
easily on the one o’clock. But would it
be wise? Why not?
Her thoughts in a jumble, Susanna
hastily gathered her small possessions together, moved
to a decision by the always imperative argument that
in a few minutes it would be too late to decide.
“Heavens! I’m glad
I thought of that!” she ejaculated, seating herself
in the train as the noon whistles shrilled all over
the city. A moment later she was a trifle disconcerted
to find the orphanage plans still in her hand.
“Well, this is surely one of
my crazy days!” Susanna strapped the stiff sheets
firmly to her handbag. “I must not forget
to take those back,” she told herself.
“Jim will ask for them the very first thing.”
Her house; when she reached it, seemed
quiet, seemed empty. Susanna crossed the porch,
wondering, and encountered the maid.
“Emma! Nobody come?”
“Sure you had the wrong day
of it,” said Emma, beaming. “Mrs.
Harrington fomed about an hour ago, and she says ’tis
next Saturday thin!”
“What do you mean?” said Susanna, sharply.
“‘Tis not to-day they’re comin’,
Mrs. Fairfax — ”
“Nonsense!” Susanna said
under her breath. She flew to her desk and snatched
up the scribbled card of engagements. “Why,
it’s no such thing!” she said indignantly.
“Of course it’s to-day! October sixteenth,
as plain as print.” And with her eyes still
on the card she reached for her desk telephone.
“Ethel,” said Susanna,
a moment later. “Listen, Ethel, this is
Susanna. Ethel, what made you say the club luncheon
wasn’t to-day? This is my day to have the
girls.... Certainly.... Why, I don’t
care what she said, I have it written down!...
Why, I think that’s very funny.... I have
it written.... No, you can laugh all you want
to, but I know I’m right.... No, that’s
nothing. Jim will eat it all up to-morrow; he
says he never gets enough to eat on Sundays....
But I can’t understand, and I don’t believe
yet that I... Yes, it’s written right
here; I’ve got my eyes on it now! It’s
the most extraordinary....”
A little vexed at Mrs. Harrington’s
unbounded amusement, Susanna terminated the conversation
as soon as was decently possible, and went kitchenward.
In her anxiety not to miss her train back to the city,
she refused Teresa’s offer of dainty sandwiches,
pastries, and tea, and merely stopped long enough
to brush up her hair and to ascertain by carefully
enumerating them out loud that she had her purse, her
gloves, the orphanage plans, and the new time-table.
“This will seem very funny,”
said poor Susanna, gallantly to herself, as she took
her seat in the train and tried to ignore a really
sharp headache, “when once I see them!
If I can only get hold of Jim, and if the afternoon
goes smoothly, I shan’t mind anything!”
Only ten minutes late for her luncheon
engagement, Susanna entered the cool depths of the
restaurant and, piloted by an impressed head waiter,
looked confidently for her own party. It was very
pleasant here, and the trays of salads and iced things
that were borne continually past her were very inviting.
But still there was no Mrs. Thayer
and no Jim. Susanna waited a few nervous minutes,
sat down, got up again, and finally, at two o’clock,
went out into the blazing, unfriendly streets, and
walked the five short squares that lay between the
restaurant and her husband’s office. A
hot, dusty wind blew steadily against her; the streets
were full of happy girls and men with suit-cases,
bound for the country and a day or two of fresh air
and idleness. Miss Perry was putting the cover
on her typewriter as Susanna entered the office, her
own suit-case waiting in a corner. She looked
astonished as Susanna came in.
“My goodness, Mrs. Fairfax!”
she ejaculated. “We’ve been trying
and trying to get you by telephone! Mr. Fairfax
was so anxious to get hold of those orphanage plans.
Mr. Thayer wanted — ”
“I’ve been following him
about all day,” said Susanna, with an undignified,
but uncontrollable gulp. She sat down limply.
“What happened to the luncheon plan?”
she asked forlornly. “Where is Mr. Fairfax?”
Miss Perry, perhaps softened by the
sight of Susanna’s filling eyes and tired face,
became very sympathetic. “Isn’t it
too bad — I know you have! But
you see Mrs. Thayer couldn’t see her friend in
the hospital this morning, so she came right down
here and got here not ten minutes after you left.
She said she couldn’t wait for you, as she had
to be back at the hospital at two, so she would do
a little shopping herself and let the rest wait.”
“Well,” said Susanna,
after a pause in which her very soul rebelled, “it
can’t be helped, I suppose! Did Mr. Fairfax
go out with her?”
“He was to take her somewhere
for a cup of tea and then he was going home.”
“Going home! But I’ve just come from
there!”
“He thought he’d probably
catch you there, I think. He was anxious to get
hold of those plans.”
“Oh, I could cry — ”
Susanna began despairingly. But indeed Miss Perry
needed no assurance of that. “I could cry!”
said Susanna again. “To-day,” she
expanded, “has been simply one miserable accident
after another! I hope it’ll be a lesson
to me! Well — ” She broke off short,
for Miss Perry, while kind, was human, and was visibly
conscious that she had promised her brother and sister-in-law
to be at their house in East Auburndale, a populous
suburb, long before it was time to put the baby to
bed. “I suppose there’s nothing for
me to do but go home,” finished Susanna, discontentedly.
“Accidents will happen!”
trilled Miss Perry, blithely, hurrying for her car.
Susanna went thoughtfully home, reflecting
soberly upon the events of the day. If she could
but live this episode down, she told herself; but
meet and win Mrs. Thayer somehow in the near future;
but bring Jim to the point of entirely forgetting
and forgiving the whole disgraceful day, she would
really reform. She would “keep lists,”
she would “make notes,” and she would
“think twice.” In short, she would
do all the things that those who had her good at heart
had been advising for the past ten years.
Of course, if the Thayers were resentful — refused
to be placated — Susanna made a little wry
mouth. But they wouldn’t be!
Still deep in stimulating thoughts
of a complete reformation, Susanna reached home again,
crossed the deep-tiled porch with its potted olives
and gay awnings, entered the big hall now dim with
afternoon shadows. Now for Jim !
But where was Jim?
“Mr. Fairfax is home, Emma?”
“Oh, there you are, Mrs. Fairfax!
And us trying and trying to telefome you! No
ma’am, he’s not home. He left on the
three-twenty. He’d only come out in a rush
for some papers, and he had to get back to town to
see some one at once. There’s a note — ”
Susanna sat down. Her head was
splitting, she was hungry and exhausted, and, at the
effort she made to keep the tears out of her eyes,
a wave of acute pain swept across her forehead.
She opened the note.
If you can find a reliable messenger
[said the note, without preamble], I wish you would
get those orphanage plans to me at Thornton’s
office before six. I have to meet him there at
four. The matter is really important, or I would
not trouble you. I’ll dine with Thayer at
the club. J.F. The pretty hallway and the
glaring strip of light beyond the open garden door
swam suddenly before Susanna’s eyes. The
hand that held the note trembled.
“I could not be so mean to him!”
said Susanna to herself. “But perhaps he
was tired and hot — poor Jim!” And aloud
she said with dignity: “I shall have to
take this paper — these plans — in
to Mr. Fairfax, Emma. I’ll catch the four-twenty.”
“You’ll be dead!” said Emma, sympathetically.
“My head aches,” Mrs.
Fairfax admitted briefly. But when she was upstairs
and alone she found herself suddenly giving way to
the long deferred burst of tears.
After a while she bathed her eyes,
brushed her hair, and substituted a more substantial
gown for the pongee. Then she started out once
more, refreshed and more cheerful in spite of herself,
and soothed unconsciously by the quiet close of the
lovely autumn afternoon.
Her own gateway was separated by a
flight of shallow stone steps from the road, and Susanna
paused there on her way to the train to gather her
skirts safely for the dusty walk. And while she
was standing there she found her gaze suddenly riveted
upon a motor-car that, still a quarter of a mile away,
was rapidly descend the slope of the hill, its two
occupants fairly shaken by its violent and rapid approach.
The road here was not wide, and curved on a sharp
grade, and Susanna always found the descent of a large
car, like this one, a matter of half-terrified fascination.
But surely with this car there was more than the ordinary
danger, she thought, with a sudden sick thumping at
her heart. Surely here was something all wrong!
Surely no sane driver —
“That man is drunk,” she
said, quite aloud. “He cannot make it!
He can’t possibly — ah-h-h!”
Her voice broke on a gasp, and she
pressed one hand tight over her eyes. For with
swift and terrible precision the accident had indeed
come to pass. The car skidded, turned, hung for
a sickening second on one wheel, struck the stone
of the roadside fence with a horrible grinding jar
and toppled heavily over against the bank.
When Susanna uncovered her eyes again,
and before she could move or cry out in the dumb horror
that had taken possession of her, she saw a man in
golfing wear run from the Porters’ gate opposite;
and another motor, in which Susanna recognized the
figure of a friend and neighbor, Dr. Whitney, swept
up beside the overturned one. When she ran, as
she presently found herself running, to the spot,
other men and women had gathered there, drawn from
lawns and porches by this sudden projection of tragedy
into the gayety of their Saturday afternoon.
“Hurt?” gasped Susanna, joining the group.
“The man is — dead,
Billy says,” said young Mrs. Porter, in lowered
tones, with an agitated clutch of Susanna’s arm.
“And, poor thing! she doesn’t realize
it, and she keeps asking where her chauffeur is and
why he doesn’t come to her!”
“Wouldn’t you think people
would have better sense than to keep a man like that!”
added another neighbor, Dexter Ellis, with a bitterness
born entirely of nervousness. “He was drunk
as a lord! Young and I were just coming out of
my side gate — ”
Every one talked at once — there
was a confusion of excited comment. Somebody
had flung a carriage robe over the silent form of the
man as it lay tumbled in the dust and weeds; Susanna
glanced toward it with a shudder. Somehow she
found herself supporting the car’s other occupant,
the woman, who was half sitting and half lying on the
bank where she had fallen. The woman had opened
her eyes and was looking slowly about the group; she
had pushed away the whiskey the doctor held to her
lips, but she looked sick and seemed in pain.
“I had just put the baby down
when I heard Dex shout — ” Susanna could
hear Mrs. Ellis saying behind her in low tones.
“Oh, it is, it’s an outrage — they
should have regarded it years ago,” said another
voice. “Merest chance in the world that
we took the side gate,” Dexter Ellis was saying,
and some man’s voice Susanna did not know reiterated
over and over: “Well, I guess he’s
run his last car, poor fellow; I guess he’s
run his last car — ”
“You feel better, don’t
you?” the doctor asked his patient, encouragingly.
“Just open your mouth and swallow this.”
And Susanna said gently: “Just try it;
you’ll feel so much stronger!”
The woman turned upon her a pair of
eyes as heavy as a sick animal’s, and moistened
her lips. “Arm,” she said with difficulty.
“Her arm’s broken,”
said the doctor, in a low tone, “and I think
her leg, too. Kane has gone to wire for the ambulance.
We’ll get her right into town.”
“You can’t take her to
town!” Susanna ejaculated, turning so that she
might not be heard by the sufferer. “Take
her in to my house.”
“The hospital is really the
most comfortable place for her, Mrs. Fairfax,”
the doctor said guardedly. “I am afraid
there is internal injury. Her mind seems somewhat
confused. You can’t undertake the responsibility — ”
“Ah, but you can’t jolt
the poor thing all the way into town — ”
Susanna began again. Mrs. Porter, at her shoulder,
interrupted her in an earnest whisper:
“Sue, dear, it’s always
done. It won’t take very long, and nobody
expects you — ”
“I know just how Susanna feels,”
interrupted Mrs. Ellis, “but after all, you
never can tell — we don’t know one thing
about her — ”
“She’ll be taken good
care of,” finished the doctor, soothingly.
“Please — don’t
let them frighten — my husband — ”
said the woman herself, slowly, her distressed eyes
moving from one face to another. “If I
could — be moved somewhere before he hears — ”
“We won’t frighten him,”
Susanna assured her tenderly. “But will
you tell us your name so we may let him know?”
The injured woman frowned. “I
did tell you — didn’t I?” she
asked painfully.
“No” — Susanna
would use this tone in her nursery some day — “No,
dear, not yet.”
“Tell us again,” said
the doctor, with too obvious an intention to soothe.
The woman gave him a look full of dignified reproach.
“If I could rest on your porch
a little while,” she said to Susanna, ignoring
the others rather purposely, “I should be quite
myself again. That will be best. Then I
can think — I can’t think now.
These people — and my head — ”
And she tried to rise, supporting
herself with a hand on Susanna’s arm. But
with the effort the last vestige of color left her
face, and she slipped, unconscious, back to the grass.
“Dead?” asked Susanna, very white.
“No — no! Only
fainted,” Dr. Whitney said. “But I
don’t like it,” he added, his finger at
the limp wrist.
“Bring her in, won’t you?”
Susanna urged with sudden decision. “I
simply can’t let her be taken ’way up to
town! This way — ”
And, relieved to have it settled,
she led them swiftly across the garden and into the
house, flung down the snowy covers of the guest-room
bed, and with Emma’s sympathetic help established
the stranger therein.
“Trouble,” whispered the
injured woman apologetically, when she opened her
eyes upon walls and curtains rioting with pink roses,
and felt the delicious softness and freshness of the
linen and pillows about her.
“Oh, don’t think of that — I
love to do it!” Susanna said honestly, patting
her head. “A nurse is coming up from the
village to look out for you, and she and the doctor
are going to make you more comfortable.”
The woman, fixing her with a dazed
yet curiously intent look, formed with her lips the
words, “God bless you,” and wearily shut
her eyes. Susanna, slipping out of the room a
few minutes later, said over and over again to herself,
“I don’t care — I’m glad
I did it!”
Still, it was not very reassuring
to hear the big hall clock strike six, and suddenly
to notice the orphanage plans lying where they had
been flung on the hall table.
“I wish it was the middle of
next year,” said Susanna, thoughtfully, going
out to sink wearily into a porch chair, “or even
next week! I’d pretend to be asleep when
Jim came home to-night,” she went on gloomily,
“if it wasn’t my duty to sit up and explain
that there are a perfect stranger and a trained nurse
in the house. Of course, being there as I was,
any humane person would have to do what I did, but
it does seem strange, this day of all days, that I
had to be there! And I wish I had thought to
send those plans in by messenger — that would
have been one thing the less to worry about, at least! — What
is it, Emma?”
For Emma, mildly repeating some question,
had come out to the porch. “Would you like
tea, Mrs. Fairfax? I could bring it out here like
you had it last week with your book.”
Susanna brightened. After all,
she had not eaten for a long while; tea would be very
welcome. And the porch was delightful, and there
was the new Locke.
“Well, that was my original
idea, Emma,” said she, “and although the
day has not gone quite as I had planned, still there’s
no reason why the idea should be changed. Bring
a supper-tea, Emma, lots of sandwiches — I’m
combining three meals in one, Miss Smith,” she
broke off to explain smilingly, as the nurse, trimly
clad in white, came to the doorway. “I’ve
not eaten since breakfast. You must have some
tea with me. And how is she? Is her mind
clearer?”
“Oh, dear me, yes! She’s
quite comfortable,” Miss Smith said cheerfully.
“Doctor thinks there’s no question of internal
trouble. Her arm is broken and her ankle badly
wrenched, but that’s all. And she’s
so grateful to you, Mrs. Fairfax. It seems she
has a perfect horror of hospitals, and she feels that
you’ve done such a remarkably kind thing — taking
her in. She asked to see you, and then we’re
going to try to make her sleep. Oh, and may I
telephone her husband?”
“Oh, she could give you his
name then!” cried Susanna, in relief. “Oh,
I am glad! Indeed, you may telephone. Who
is she?”
Miss Smith repeated the name and address.
Susanna, stared at her blankly.
Then the most radiant of all her ready smiles lighted
her face.
“Well, this is really the most
extraordinary day!” she said softly, after a
pause. “I’ll come right up, Miss Smith,
but perhaps you might let me telephone for you first.
I can get her husband easily. I know just where
he is. He and my own husband are dining together
this evening, as it happens — ”