Oh, the dainty, dainty maid to the borders
of the brook
Lingered down as lightly as
the breeze;
And the shy water-spiders quit their scurrying
to look;
And the happy water whispered
to the trees.
-C.
G. D. Roberts.
Dr. Gilbert Allen, gold-medalist of
the Toronto School of Medicine, and just home from
a post-graduate course in London and Edinburgh, had
his coat off, his sleeves rolled up, and was busy
arranging bottles on the shelf of his tiny dispensary.
He was whistling cheerily. It was young Dr.
Allen’s nature to be cheerful even under adverse
circumstances, and this morning all his prospects
were bright. For after years of spending money-and
largely another man’s money, too-he
was at last on his feet. His college life had
been a very happy one, it is true; so, also, had been
the years since his graduation, the first two spent
as house surgeon in a Toronto hospital, the last,
and best of all, in the Old Land. They had given
him breadth and experience; but though Gilbert was
willing to concede that experience teaches, he was
equally assured that she does not pay bills.
Now he was a free man, and master of his profession.
He used the last phrase modestly; he was ready and
anxious to make the mastery more complete, and at the
same time to win a name for himself and a home and
a fortune for Rosalie.
As he stacked the bottles noisily
in their places he glanced around the little room,
and wished he might turn a handspring, just to let
off steam and be able to write to Harwood and the
other fellows to say his office was big enough to
admit of the feat. He wisely crushed the desire,
for he recognized the fact that he was under surveillance.
Just outside the windows stretched a little lawn, with
a star-shaped flower-bed in the middle. Up and
down this green space, following a leisurely and devious
course, journeyed a lawnmower, propelled by a long-limbed
youth. His straw hat hung limply from his head,
his coat flapped limply from his shoulders, and his
trousers bulged limply from his big top-boots.
Nevertheless, he had a certain lumbering airiness
of movement, and such a mien of lofty indifference
to his surroundings that the beholder was impressed
with the idea that he was a very sprightly gentleman
indeed, and need never work unless he was so minded.
Just why he should spend a whole morning cutting a
few square yards of short May grass was a problem
the doctor had not yet solved. But even in his
brief acquaintance, Gilbert had learned that the actions
of this young man, who had entered into an important
relation to himself as groom and general factotum,
were not to be measured by any rational standard.
The slow clatter of the lawnmower
grew louder, and finally ceased beneath the window.
The doctor turned, a bottle in each hand. The
open sash was filled by a straw hat which formed the
frame for a broad, smiling countenance.
“Want any help?” the visitor inquired,
genially.
“No, thank you,” answered
the doctor, adding, pointedly: “You have
other work to do, you know.”
“Oh, I ain’t worryin’
about that,” responded his man-servant, reassuringly.
“Old Doc. Williams uster say he’d
make kindlin’ wood o’ me, when I didn’t
hustle round, but it never fizzed on me.”
He hung himself over the window-sill with a sigh
of satisfaction, and gazed admiringly at his employer.
A wire door, leading from the veranda
to the main portion of the house, swung slowly open,
and a woman, wearing a big, blue-checked apron, and
carrying a long pewter spoon, looked out anxiously.
“Davy!” she called in a loud whisper,
“why don’t you get on with your work?”
“I’m helpin’ the
doctor with his mixtures,” he answered, in a
tone of remonstrance.
The woman’s tight mouth closed
emphatically. “Well, hish!” she said,
raising her spoon warningly. “Susan Winters
is sittin’ on her porch, an’ she’ll
hear if you don’t look out. It’s
no use talkin’ about things, anyhow.”
The wire door creaked again, Mrs.
Munn sailed away, and her son hung himself farther
over the window-sill. Evidently he had inherited
none of his mother’s reticence.
“Say,” he ventured, confidentially,
“Elsie Cameron’s home; came yesterday,
the very day you came. Ain’t that funny?”
The young doctor did not seem to see
anything humorous in the coincidence. He glanced
meaningly toward the lawnmower.
“I bet she thinks it’s
a kind of a come-down to come back an’ work on
the farm after doin’ nothin’ but sing for
so long. She’s a bully singer, I tell
you, only she’s got red hair.”
He waited for some comment, but as
there was none forthcoming, except a louder clatter
of bottles, he continued: “Everybody thinks
she’s so awful good-lookin’, but I don’t
think she’s half as pretty as Jean-that’s
her sister. Say”-his voice sank
to a whisper-“did anybody tell you
about her sister yet?”
There was a note of strained anxiety,
almost amounting to terror, in the boy’s tone,
that commanded Gilbert’s attention. He
looked around. Perhaps it was some serious illness,
and the new doctor was badly in need of a patient.
“No. What’s the
matter with her?” he asked, interestedly.
Davy glanced about him fearfully,
as though he were about to disclose the young woman
as the author of a deadly crime. He leaned still
farther into the room. “She’s-she’s
my girl!” he exploded, in a loud whisper.
The new doctor turned his back suddenly.
There was a long pause. “I must congratulate
you,” he said at last, in a smothered voice.
Davy gazed at his broad back uncertainly.
He had heard that formula before, but it had always
been delivered to the newly wed. He was afraid
the doctor was under a pleasant misapprehension.
“We’re jist kind o’
keepin’ company-yet,” he explained
carefully. “An’ Jean, she’s
an awful girl to laugh. An’ then there’s
old lady Cameron-that’s her mother.
She’s a blasted bother. There’s
never a fella’ goes to see them girls but she
has to sit ‘round an’ do all the talkin’.
It ain’t fair.” His tone was deeply
aggrieved. “You won’t like it any
better’n’ me if you keep company with Elsie,”
he added, after a pause.
The doctor turned, and his expression
was so alarming that the youth slipped back several
feet into the garden. “That’s what
everybody’s been sayin’,” he stammered,
in self-defense. “All the folks was sayin’
you’d be sure to keep company with Elsie when
she came home. I thought it would be kind o’
handy ‘count o’ me goin’ to see Jean.
We’d be company home, nights.”
The indignation that had been rising
in the young doctor’s gray eyes vanished.
He turned quickly to his bottles and indulged in a
spasm of silent laughter. But his face was very
grave when he looked around again. “Look
here, David,” he said firmly, “I’d
advise you not to discuss my affairs. Neither
you nor the rest of the village had better even speculate
upon them. You’re almost dead sure to be
wrong. Now go on with your work.”
The boy slowly and reluctantly detached
himself from the window-sill, and set the lawnmower
on another zigzag journey. His hat, his coat,
and his trousers hung limper than ever. He moved
wearily, and at the end of the garden he sat down
under a cherry-tree to muse on the strange, sad fact
that his new employer promised to be not one whit
more companionable than old Doc. Williams.
The young doctor finished his work,
and went up the stairs three steps at a time, making
a commotion that brought Mrs. Munn from her pie-baking
in hurried alarm. He washed his hands, resumed
his coat, and, leaning out of the window, wished with
all his might that he had something to do. He
was seized with an honest, pagan desire that some
one would get sick, or that there might be an accident
in the mill –just a mild accident,
of course; or, better still, that that queer specimen
of humanity sitting under his cherry-tree, down there,
should be smitten with paralysis. He confessed
that this last seemed the most hopeful outlook, then
laughed at himself for his monstrous wishes.
He seized his hat and ran downstairs. He would
go out and explore the village. He must do something,
he warned himself, or he would be in danger of rushing
into the street and lacerating the first man he met,
just for the sake of sewing him up again.
He passed out to the gate. The
long, shady village street, bordered by tall, swaying
elms, stretched away on either hand, peaceful and
deserted. To the new doctor the place looked
half asleep, and uncompromisingly healthful.
The clear May morning air was filled with a chorus
of robins and orioles. A bluebird in the orchard
bordering his lawn was singing ecstatically.
Far up the street the musical cling-clang of the
blacksmith’s anvil, and from the depths of the
ravine, in the opposite direction, the hum of the sawmill,
served only like a lullaby to make the silence more
dreamy.
He stepped out upon the boardwalk
that ran along the street. Overhead the maples
and elms met, making a cool tunnel. In this green
canopy nest-building was being carried on, on a great
scale and with tremendous commotion. The doctor
picked his way carefully along the undulating surface
of the sidewalk, for the boards were damp and rotten,
and liable to fly up at one end and break a limb; and
though he was anxious for a patient, he did not fancy
serving in that capacity himself.
The quiet houses, surrounded by their
demure gardens, gave no indication that he was being
watched from behind many a window-blind. Neither
was there any stir to give hint that from the upstairs
window of the village shop at the end of the street
a telescope was pointing at him, while Granny Long
informed the breathless circle about her bed that
his necktie was of blue-gray satin, and that his hair
was thick and wavy.
Quite unconscious of the sensation
he was creating, the new doctor walked on. He
passed a tiny white house set in a square garden bright
with early blossoms. A little woman, in a faded
lilac gown, sat sewing on the porch, and a green parrot,
in a cage at her side, stalked to and fro on his perch,
muttering sullenly. At sight of the stranger
the bird gave an indignant stare, then swung, head
downward, from his perch and shouted, “Oh, Lordy,
ain’t we havin’ a slow time!”
The remark so exactly coincided with
the new doctor’s sentiments that he looked over
the cedar hedge at the speaker with a feeling of friendly
regard. But the little lilac lady seemed quite
of another mind. She sprang up in dismayed haste,
scattering thimble and scissors out on the pathway,
and, seizing the cage, fled with it indoors.
Gilbert passed on, feeling that there
was one creature, at least, in this new place who
was in sympathy with him. His eye traveled with
satisfaction along the double row of trim houses and
neat gardens; they spoke of thrift and prosperity.
There was only one exception, the place next to the
home of the ennuied parrot. Hens scratched merrily
in the midst of desert flower-beds, or nested under
the lilac bushes, a handsome goose and gander passed
in stately promenade up and down the front veranda,
and the whole place had a happy, go-as-you-please air.
The last in the line was the schoolhouse,
a big, square building, scarred and worn, standing
in the middle of a yard trampled bare of grass, and
surrounded by the forlorn skeleton of a fence.
From the battered pump in one corner, to the dilapidated
woodshed in the other, the whole premises had the
appearance of having just weathered a long and terrible
siege. The commanding voice of the Duke of Wellington
coming through the open windows added to its military
suggestiveness.
When he had passed the school the
stranger found himself at the end of the village.
The row of houses stopped at a rustic bridge spanning
a ravine. Away up this valley he could see the
tall smokestack of the sawmill, with its waving plume
of smoke coming up out of a fairy mass of delicate
May foliage. The mill-pond gleamed, green and
golden brown, between the willow clumps along its
margin. From the dam a stream issued in a little,
noisy, silver waterfall. It babbled across the
road, under the old bridge, among bracken and mint,
and wound this way and that through the deep valley
until it lost itself in a swamp far to the south.
A hard, beaten path led from the street down into
the gold and green depths. It was an alluring
path, and Gilbert stepped into it. He slid and
stumbled down the steep bank, catching at blossoming
dogwood bushes and fragrant cedar boughs. A boyish
light came into his eyes as they caught the flash
of the tiny river; here green under an overhanging
willow, there snow white under a rain of cherry blossoms,
now silver as it ran around a shallow curve, and again
gold in the sunlight filtered through a tangle of elm
boughs and bitter-sweet.
The little valley was as level as
a floor at the bottom, carpeted with vivid green grass
spangled with dandelions, and intoxicating with the
perfume of the wild-cherry blossoms. A cow stood
knee deep in the stream, and another was feeding off
the underbrush half way up the bank. At a sudden
curve in the brook a great elm stretched up from a
bank of blue violets. On its topmost limb, swinging
gaily, an oriole was blowing gloriously on his little
golden trumpet.
Gilbert flung himself down on the
violet bank. He had been born and bred a country
boy, and now, after years of city life, the old charm
of the free open spaces of earth and sky came over
him stronger than ever. He wondered if Rosalie
would not be happy, too, if she were to come down
into this green-and-gold Paradise with him, and listen
to the brook babbling along over the pebbles.
And yet, how could he ask her to leave the wealth
and ease of her city home and come to this dull village?
He reflected, with a deep sigh, upon the humiliating
fact that Rosalie would not consider the proposition
for an instant, even if he had the courage to make
it. Well, he would work hard, and by and by
he would go back to the city, and then she would listen-she
must listen. He leaned back against the elm
and dreamed of that day. He could see the light
in Rosalie’s eyes as he had seen it that last
day in Toronto. He would have been happier to-day
if they had not been so bright and merry on the occasion
of his departure. But what beautiful eyes they
were! Blue-so blue; as blue as-he
was gazing at something the exact color-a
spot of vivid azure that had appeared from among the
trees at the top of the opposite bank. It moved,
and Gilbert saw that it was the figure of a girl in
a violet gown. She made a pretty rural picture
as she stood for a moment poised upon the fence-top,
a white sunbonnet on her head and a basket on her
arm. She descended sedately, holding her basket
with great care, and tripped down the zigzag path to
the edge of the stream. Here some big, white
stones, peeping from the golden pools, made a passage
to the other side, and the trim lassie began to pick
her way daintily across. Gilbert watched her
with amused pleasure. He seemed to have stepped
into some old rustic ballad. What was that song
the boys used to sing at college? Something about
the pretty, dainty maiden, going a-haying, or a-Maying,
or a-something, all of a bright May morning, tra
la la! This one was just like her,
only she should be in her bare feet, and carry a pail
and a stool, and be coming down to milk that cow standing
so placidly in the stream. He felt an almost
irresistible desire to sing out, “Where are you
going, my pretty maid?” If he were only a gallant
youth, in a velvet cloak and silken hose, he reflected,
instead of a commonplace nineteenth-century young
man in gray tweed, he would go down the bank and assist
her over. The situation absolutely demanded it.
Suddenly he arose, with a smothered
laugh. He would have to take a part in the pretty
comedy, after all, for the dainty damsel was in distress.
She stood poised on a stone in midstream, like a bird
desiring, yet not daring, to fly. A long leap
was needed to land her on the next stone, and she
paused, perplexed, evidently mindful of her eggs.
Gilbert came quickly down the bank, his eyes twinkling.
“May I help you across?”
he asked, coming toward her, hat in hand. He
felt that the words fell into a sort of jaunty rhythm
of their own accord.
The girl looked up quickly, startled
at his sudden appearance. The movement caused
her sunbonnet to slip back, revealing her face, and
Gilbert felt suddenly and unaccountably abashed, for
the girl looked straight into his amused face with
a glance of grave and unapproachable dignity.
He did not even notice, at first, how pretty she was.
He saw only those serious eyes. They were wonderful
eyes, too; deep, and of a strange, elusive amber,
like the water at her feet. They held the mystery
of its deep brown pools, and the light of the golden
flecks upon its surface. There were the same
brown shadows and golden lights repeated in the masses
of bronze hair piled like a crown on the top of her
shapely head.
From some impulse he did not understand,
Gilbert felt a vague desire to apologize for his very
existence. It seemed as though that searching
glance had read the frivolous thoughts in which he
had been indulging. He wondered, in deep mortification,
if she had noticed any faint tinge of familiarity
in his manner.
“I-I beg your pardon.
I hope I did not startle you,” he said, half
stammering. “I hope you will let me help
you across.”
“Thank you, you are very kind.”
Her voice was low, and very musical, her manner was
dignity itself. “I did not know the spaces
were so wide.” She spoke with a frank
simplicity, looking at him very honestly and very
gravely, and Gilbert felt tacitly rebuked. He
was struck by the fact that this country girl, in
the coarse dress and sunbonnet, whom he had whimsically
likened to a rustic lass, to be helped across a brook
for a kiss, had instantly, by a mere glance, clothed
the situation in an impregnable mantle of conventionality.
He took her basket and held out his hand, feeling
as though he were about to assist a princess from
her carriage. With a touch she sprang past him
and stepped quietly up the bank. “Thank
you,” she said, sedately, as she took the basket
from him. “I think it is Dr. Allen to whom
I am indebted, is it not?”
Gilbert clutched his hat again.
“Yes, I am very fortunate to have had the privilege,”
he said, feeling with relief that he was beginning
to recover.
“I am Miss Cameron,” she
said, with a stateliness that seemed to convert the
sunbonnet into a crown, and the basket of eggs into
a scepter.
Gilbert’s mind dived back into
the remembrance of his stableboy’s remarks of
a few minutes earlier. What had he said?
He could not remember, except that the village had
designated some one of that name as the object of
his future attentions, and there was something, too,
about red hair. He thought her hair beautiful-quite
wonderful, indeed, in its bronze splendor.
He murmured some polite remark, and
was wondering if he might ask to be allowed to carry
the basket of eggs up the hill, or if he would be
committing an outrage by so doing, when he was saved
from making a second mistake by a shout from the opposite
bank:
“Elsie! Elsie, lassie!
Would yon be the new doctor body ye’ve got
there?”
The voice came from a little old man,
hobbling, with the aid of a stick, along the water’s
edge. His small body was almost bent double,
and his whole person seemed engulfed in a huge straw
hat, from under which appeared his only prominent
feature-a long, wispy, red beard.
The girl gave a little inarticulate
sound, and Gilbert glanced at her. Her stately
gravity had vanished, her face was lit with a radiant
smile. She ran down to the brink of the stream.
“Yes, Uncle Hughie,” she
called, in a clear, silvery tone, with a new caressing
quality in it, “it’s Dr. Allen. Do
you want to speak to him?”
“Yes, yes. Oh, yes, indeed.
Come away across, man! Come away! There’s
a poor, sick body lying down the glen a wee bit.
Come away, man, and try your hand on him whatefer.”
Gilbert glanced at the girl again,
half doubtfully. This was so unlike the first
call to a patient which he had so often pictured that
he was taken unawares. She seemed to divine
his thoughts.
“Will you go?” she said
gently. “It is my uncle. He is always
helping some one in trouble. Perhaps there has
been an accident in the mill.”
“Of course, of course, I shall
be glad,” he cried, filled with compunction;
and with a word of farewell he sprang nimbly across
the stepping-stones.
“Do you need my help, Uncle
Hughie?” called the silvery voice behind him.
“Och, it’s the good lassie
you will be!” came from under the straw hat.
“No, no. It is jist a poor tramp body,
and the doctor will be curing him.”
Gilbert reached the other side, and
the queer little figure hobbled toward him with outstretched
hand. He took off his hat and made a stately
bow, and the young man looked at him with pleasure
and surprise. The little old man’s face
was wrinkled and brown, and bore the marks of pain,
but his eyes shone out with a warm, kind brilliancy
that went straight to the stranger’s heart.
They were the girl’s eyes, exactly, but with
none of her lofty reserve.
“Ech! hech!” he cried,
disappearing once more within the hat. “Indeed
and indeed, and it’s the new doctor! Hoch,
yes, yes, it is welcome you will be to Elmbrook.
Eh, and we would not be expecting such a fine-looking
one. Indeed, no! And it would be a fine
Scottish name, too, oh, a fine name indeed, Allen.
And-you would not be hafing the Gaelic,
I suppose?” His eyes gleamed wistfully from
between the hat and the whiskers.
“No,” said Gilbert, smiling.
“My mother spoke it, but she did not teach
us children.”
“Och, och, well, well,”
he said, reassuringly. “It will not be
the way of the young Canadians, and perhaps it is
better. Come away, now, come away! I would
be finding a poor tramp body down the glen here, ech,
ech, the peety of it! The peety of it!”
He hobbled away ahead, talking volubly.
Gilbert glanced back as he followed, but the princess
in the violet gown had disappeared.
“Eh, now, it would jist be the
good Lord that would be sending him to me, indeed.
Eh, the Almighty would be giving me everything in
the world that I could be wanting. But I will
jist be an awful complainin’ body, and sometimes
I would be saying, if I would only have the chance
to help some one. That’s it!” he
cried, turning a flashing eye upon Gilbert.
“That will be the only thing worth while in this
world. Eh, it is you that will be finding that
out, Dr. Allen, and a happy man you will be, oh, yes,
indeed. It is the doctor bodies that has the
chance.” He stopped and turned again.
“Eh, did ye ever think He would be a doctor
Himself?” he added, in an awed whisper.
“Yes, yes, most folks now would be thinkin’
He would jist be a preacher. But I would be
rastlin’ things out sometimes at night, when
the rheumatics would be keeping me awake. The
rheumatics would be a fine thing to make a body think,
doctor, oh, yes, a fine thing, and I would be wishing
one night that old Dr. Williams would be curing me,
and then I would be rastlin’ it out that He
would jist be a doctor Himself. Oh, hoch,
yes, yes, indeed it would be wonderful; yes, yes,
wonderful!”
The young man regarded him curiously.
Some strange emotion stirred in his heart: a
memory of those days when his mother made the Great
Physician a very real person to him. It seemed
so long ago that he had almost forgotten, and yet
he experienced a feeling as though he had suddenly
come face to face with a long-lost friend.
“I am afraid such rheumatism
as you must endure would keep me from thinking of
anything but myself,” he said, his professional
eye taking in the signs of the painful disease in
the old man’s crippled frame.
His companion gave a joyous laugh.
“Hoots! It will jist be a wee tickle
sometimes. But I will be an awful complainin’
body, doctor. Old Dr. Williams could be telling
you I would be a terrible burden to him, indeed; and
you will be finding me a bother. Yes, oh, yes.
That is why I would be so pleased that the Almighty
would be sending me a chance to help. For I
would jist be grumblin’ and a burden all the
days-eh, yes, yes, och, hoch!”
His voice suddenly dropped to a pitying, caressing
tone, such as one might use to a hurt child.
“Here he is,” he whispered. “Eh,
the peety of it!”
A man was half sitting, half lying,
on the grassy bank of the stream, supported by a pile
of balsam boughs. His long body, in its worn,
patched clothing, was pitifully emaciated. His
face was ghastly, and deeply marked with the sad lines
that grief alone can trace. His hair was white,
and yet, somehow, he did not seem aged, except by suffering.
He opened his eyes as the young doctor bent over him.
There was the pathetic look in them of an animal
that had received its death-wound. But as the
light of consciousness returned there was resentment
in his glance as well as pain. He looked like
a man who had been pushed to the edge of despair,
but who could still fight, not in hope, but in fierce
anger against his lot.
“He must be moved to some house
at once,” the doctor announced after a brief
examination. “He seems to be suffering
from exhaustion and hunger.”
Old Hughie Cameron was fussing about
him, making inarticulate, pitying remarks. “Oh,
yes, yes, he will jist be coming with me, then,”
he cried eagerly. “The Cameron door will
always be on the latch indeed! Oh, yes, the folks
will be real pleased, whatefer.”
The sick man looked up suddenly and
spoke with unlooked-for strength. “I will
accept charity from no living man,” he said curtly.
“Hoots, toots!” cried
Uncle Hughie, in gentle remonstrance. “Charity!
It would jist be a bit of a neighborly act, man!
Come away, now, come.” His voice was
coaxing. “Here is the doctor, now, waiting
to help you. Yes, yes, a fine new doctor, indeed,”
he added enticingly.
“Come,” said Gilbert authoritatively.
“You must have food and shelter at once.
You can’t stay here.”
The man opened his eyes again.
“I haven’t a cent of money,” he
said weakly, but defiantly. “But if you
will take me to some place I can rent, I will earn
money and pay for it after. But I will enter
no man’s house. I will stay here and die-it
would be best, anyway.” He closed his
eyes indifferently.
Old Hughie suddenly plucked the puzzled
young doctor’s sleeve. “There will
be an old shanty down the glen here, a wee step,”
he whispered, “jist by the Drowned Lands.
It belongs to Sandy McQuarry, but he would be giv -”
He paused, for the fierce eyes opened upon him-“renting
it,” he substituted hastily.
“I will go there,” whispered
the sick man, and Gilbert stooped and raised him gently.
“And what will your name be?”
asked Uncle Hughie, striving in his pity to say something
friendly which this strange man would not resent.
“My name,” said the man
slowly, “my name”-he stood and
looked about him in a dazed way-“yes,
yes, it’s McIntyre-John McIntyre.”
He wavered a moment, then fell, fainting, in the
young doctor’s arms.