The long slow journey to Billabong
homestead was accomplished.
The Hermit had never regained consciousness
throughout the weary hours during which every jolt
of the express-wagon over the rough tracks had sent
a throb to the hearts of the watchers. All unconscious
he had lain while they lifted him from the bunk where
he had slept for so many lonely nights. The men
packed his few personal belongings quickly. Norah,
remembering a hint dropped by the Hermit in other days,
had instituted a search for buried papers, which resulted
in the unearthing of a tin box containing various
documents. She had insisted, too, that the rough
furniture should go, and it was piled in the front
of the wagon. Another man had brought out the
old pack mare for the baggage of the original fishing
party, and the whole cavalcade moved off before the
sun had got above the horizon.
But it was a tedious journey.
Dr. Anderson sat beside his patient, watching the
feeble action of the heart and the flickering pulse,
plying him with stimulants and nourishment, occasionally
calling a halt for a few minutes’ complete rest.
Close to the wheel Dick Stephenson rode, his eyes
scarcely leaving his father’s face. On the
other side, Norah and her father rode in silent, miserable
anxiety, fretting at their utter helplessness.
Dr. Anderson glanced sharply now and then at the little
girl’s face.
“This isn’t good for her,”
he said at length quietly to Mr. Linton. “She’s
had too much already. Take her home.”
He raised his voice. “You’d better
go on,” he said; “let Mrs. Brown know just
what is coming; she’ll need you to help her
prepare the patient’s room, Norah. You,
too, Stephenson.”
“I won’t leave him, thanks,”
he said. “I’d rather not he
might become conscious.”
“No chance of that,” the
doctor said, “best not, too, until we have him
safely in bed. However, stay if you like perhaps
it’s as well. I think, Linton, you’d
better send a wire to Melbourne for a trained nurse.”
“And one to mother,” Dick said quickly.
“That’s gone already,”
Mr. Linton said. “I sent George back with
it last night when he brought the mare out.”
He smiled in answer to Dick’s grateful look.
“Well, come on, Norah.”
The remembrance of that helpless form
in the bottom of the wagon haunted Norah’s memory
all through the remainder of the ride home. She
was thoroughly tired now excitement that
had kept her up the day before had prevented her from
sleeping, and she scarcely could keep upright in the
saddle. However, she set her teeth to show no
sign of weakness that should alarm her father, and
endeavoured to have a smile for him whenever his anxious
gaze swept her white face.
The relief of seeing the red roof
of home! That last mile was the longest of all and
when at length they were at the gate, and she had
climbed stiffly off her pony, she could only lean against
his shoulder and shake from head to foot. Mr.
Linton picked her up bodily and carried her, feebly
protesting, into Mrs. Brown.
“Only knocked up,” he
said, in answer to the old woman’s terrified
exclamation. “Bed is all she needs and
hot soup, if you’ve got it. Norah, dear” as
she begged to be allowed to remain and help “you
can do nothing just now, except get yourself all right.
Do as I tell you, girlie;” and in an astonishingly
short space of time Norah found herself tucked up
in bed in her darkened room, with Daddy’s hand
fast in hers, and a comforting feeling of everything
fading away to darkness and sleep.
It was twilight when she opened her
eyes again, and Brownie sat knitting by her side.
“Bless your dear heart,”
she said fervently. “Yes, the old gentleman’s
come, an’ he’s quite comfertable in bed though
he don’t know no one yet. Dr. Anderson’s
gone to Cunjee, but he’s coming back in his steam
engine to stay all night; an’ your pa’s
having his dinner, which he needs it, poor man.
An’ he don’t want you to get up, lovey,
for there ain’t nothin’ you can do.
I’ll go and get you something to eat.”
But it was Mr. Linton who came presently,
bearing a tray with dainty chicken and salad, and
a glass of clear golden jelly. He sat by Norah
while she ate.
“We’re pretty anxious,
dear,” he told her, when she had finished, and
was snugly lying down again, astonishingly glad of
her soft bed. “You won’t mind my
not staying. I must be near old Jim. I’ll
be glad when Anderson’s back. Try to go
to sleep quickly.” He bent to kiss her.
“You don’t know what a comfort your sleep
has been to me, my girlie,” he said. “Good-night!”
It was the third day of the struggle
with death over the Hermit’s unconscious body,
and again twilight was falling upon Billabong.
The house was hushed and silent.
No footfall was allowed to sound where the echo might
penetrate to the sick-room. Near its precincts
Mrs. Brown and the Melbourne trained nurse reigned
supreme, and Dr. Anderson came and went as often as
he could manage the fourteen-mile spin out from Cunjee
in his motor.
Norah had a new care a
little fragile old lady, with snowy hair, and depths
of infinite sadness in her eyes, whom Dick Stephenson
called “mother.” The doctor would
not allow either mother or son into the sick-room the
shock of recognition, should the Hermit regain consciousness
suddenly, might be too much. So they waited about,
agonisingly anxious, pitifully helpless. Dick
rebelled against the idleness at length. It would
kill him, he said, and, borrowing a spade from the
Chinese gardener, he spent his time in heavy digging,
within easy call of the house. But for the wife
and mother there was no help. She was gently
courteous to all, gently appreciative of Norah’s
attempts to occupy her thoughts. But throughout
it all whether she looked at the pets outside,
or walked among the autumn roses in the garden, or
struggled to eat at the table she was listening,
ever listening.
In the evening of the third day Mr.
Linton came quickly into the drawing-room. Tears
were falling down his face. He went up to Mrs.
Stephenson and put his hand on her shoulder.
“It’s it’s
all right, we think,” he said brokenly.
“He’s conscious and knew me, dear old
chap! I was sitting by the bed, and suddenly his
eyes opened and all the fever had gone. ‘Why,
Davy!’ he said. I told him everything was
all right, and he mustn’t talk and
he’s taken some nourishment, and gone off into
a natural sleep. Anderson’s delighted.”
Then he caught Mrs. Stephenson quickly as she slipped
to his feet, unconscious.
Then there were days of dreary waiting,
of slow, harassing convalescence. The patient
did not seem to be alive to any outside thought.
He gained strength very slowly, but he lay always silent,
asking no questions, only when Mr. Linton entered the
room showing any sign of interest. The doctor
was vaguely puzzled, vaguely anxious.
“Do you think I could go and
see him?” Norah was outside the door of the
sick-room. The doctor often found her there a
little silent figure, listening vainly for her friend’s
voice. She looked up pleadingly. “Not
if you think I oughtn’t to,” she said.
“I don’t believe it would
hurt him,” Dr. Anderson said, looking down at
her. “Might wake him up a bit I
know you won’t excite him.”
So it was that the Hermit, waking
from a restless sleep, found by his side a small person
with brown curls that he remembered.
“Why, it’s my little friend,”
he murmured, feeling weakly for her hand. “This
seems a queer world old friends and new,
all mixed up.”
“I’m so glad you’re
better, dear Mr. Hermit,” Norah said. She
bent and kissed him. “And we’re all
friends everybody.”
“You did that once before,”
he said feebly. “No one had kissed me for
such a long, long while. But mustn’t let
you.”
“Why?” asked Norah blankly.
“Because because
people don’t think much of me, Miss Norah,”
he said, a deep shade falling on his fine old face.
“They say I’m no good. I don’t
suppose I’d be allowed to be here, only I’m
an old man, and I’m going to die.”
“But you’re not!”
Norah cried. “Dr. Anderson says you’re
not! And and oh, you’re
making a great mistake. Everyone wants you.”
“Me!” said the Hermit,
in sudden bitter scorn. “No, only strangers
like you. Not my own.”
“Oh, you don’t know,”
Norah protested. She was painfully aware of the
order not to excite the patient, but it was awful to
let him be so unhappy! “Dad’s not
a stranger he always knew you. And
see how he wants you!”
“Dad?” the Hermit questioned
feebly. “Is David Linton your father?”
She nodded, and for a minute he was silent. “No
wonder you and I were friends!” he said.
“But you’re not all not even
you and Davy.”
“No, but ”
He forced a smile, in pity for her perplexity.
“Dear little girl, you don’t
understand,” he said. “There’s
something even friendship can’t wipe out, though
such friendship as your father’s can bridge
it over. But it’s always there a
black, cruel gulf. And that’s disgrace!”
Norah could not bear the misery of his eyes.
“But if it’s all a horrible
mistake?” she said. “If everybody
knew it ?”
“If it’s a mistake!”
The Hermit’s hand was on her
wrist like a vice. For a moment Norah shivered
in fear of what her words might have done.
“What do you mean? For God’s sake,
tell me?”
She steadied her voice to answer him bravely.
“Please, you mustn’t get
excited, dear Mr. Hermit,” she said. “I’ll
tell you. Dad told me all about it before we
found you. It’s all a terrible mistake.
Every one knows you were a good man. Everyone
wants to be friends with you. Only they thought
you were dead.”
“I managed that.”
His voice was sharp and eager. “I saw the
other body in the river and the rest was easy.”
He struggled for calmness and Norah held a glass of
water to his lips.
“Please don’t get excited!” she
begged.
“I won’t,” he smiled at her.
“Tell me does everyone know?”
“Everyone,” Norah nodded.
There was a step behind her and a sudden light flashed
into the Hermit’s eyes.
“Davy! Is it true? I am cleared?”
“Years ago, old man.”
David Linton’s voice was husky. “All
the world wants to make it up to you.”
“All the world they’re only
two!” the sick man said. “Do they
know?”
“Yes.”
“Where are they?”
For a moment Mr. Linton hesitated, not knowing what
risk he might run.
“Oh! for pity’s sake don’t
be cautious, David,” the Hermit begged.
“I’ll be calm anything only
don’t refuse a starving man bread! Davy,
tell me!”
“They’re here, old man.”
“Here! Can I will they ?”
“Ah, we’ve got to be careful
of you, Jim, old chap,” Mr. Linton said.
“You’ve been a very sick man and
you’re not better yet. But they’re
only living on the hope of seeing you of
having you again of making it up to you.”
“And they believe in me?”
“The boy Dick never
believed a word against you,” Mr. Linton said.
“And your wife ah, if she doubted,
she has paid for it again and again in tears.
You’ll forgive her, Jim?”
“Yes,” he said simply.
“I’ve been bitter enough God knows, but
it all seems gone. You’ll bring her, Davy?”
But at the word Norah was out of the
room, racing along the hall.
Out in the gardens Dick Stephenson
dug mightily in the hard soil, and his mother watched
him, listening always. She heard the flying footsteps
on the gravel and turned quickly to meet Norah.
“Mr. Stephenson, he wants you!”
“Is he worse?” Dick gasped.
“No I think he’s
all right. But he knows everything and he wants
you both!”
In his room the Hermit heard the steps
in the hall the light, slow feet, and the
man’s tread, that curbed its impatience, lingering
to support them. His breath came quickly as he
stared at the door.
Then for a moment they faced each
other, after the weary years; each gaunt and wan and
old, but in their eyes the light and the love of long
ago. The hermit’s eyes wandered an instant
to his son’s face, seeking in the stalwart man
the little lad he knew. Then they came back to
his wife.
“Mary!”
“Jim!” She tottered to the bed.
“Jim can you forgive me?”
“Forgive oh, my girl!”
The two grey heads were close together. David
Linton slipped from the room.