After luncheon, when everybody at
Hope Springs takes a nap, we had another meeting at
the shelter-house, this time with Mr. Pierce.
He had spent the morning tramping over the hills with
a gun and keeping out of the way of people, and what
with three square meals, a good night’s sleep
and the exercise, he was looking a lot better.
Seen in daylight, he had very dark hair and blue-gray
eyes and a very square chin, although it had a sort
of dimple in it. I used to wonder which won out,
the dimple or the chin, but I wasn’t long in
finding out.
Well, he looked dazed when I took
him to the shelter-house and he saw Mr. Dick and Mrs.
Dick and the Mr. Sams and Miss Patty. They gave
him a lawn-mower to sit on, and Mr. Sam explained
the situation.
“I know it’s asking a
good bit, Mr. Pierce,” he said, “and personally
I can see only one way out of all this. Carter
ought to go in and take charge, and his - er - wife
ought to go back to school. But they won’t
have it, and - er - there are other
reasons.” He glanced at Miss Patty.
Mr. Pierce also glanced at Miss Patty.
He’d been glancing at her at intervals of two
seconds ever since she came in, and being a woman and
having a point to gain, Miss Patty seemed to have forgotten
the night before, and was very nice to him. Once
she smiled directly at him, and whatever he was saying
died in his throat of the shock. When she turned
her head away he stared at the back of her neck, and
when she looked at the fire he gazed at her profile,
and always with that puzzled look, as if he hadn’t
yet come to believe that she was the newspaper Miss
Jennings.
After everything had been explained
to him, including Mr. Jennings’ liver and disposition,
she turned to him and said:
“We are in your hands, you see,
Mr. Pierce. Are you going to help us?”
And when she asked him that, it was plain to me that
he was only sorry he couldn’t die helping.
“If everybody agrees to it,”
he said, looking at her, “and you all think
it’s feasible and I can carry it off, I’m
perfectly willing to try.”
“Oh, it’s feasible,”
Mr. Dick said in a relieved voice, getting up and
beginning to strut up and down the room. “It
isn’t as though I’m beyond call.
You can come out here and consult me if you get stuck.
And then there’s Minnie; she knows a good bit
about the old place.”
Mr. Sam looked at me and winked.
“Of course,” said Mr.
Dick, “I expect to retain control, you understand
that, I suppose, Pierce? You can come out every
day for instructions. I dare say sanatoriums
are hardly your line.”
Mr. Pierce was looking at Miss Patty
and she knew it. When a woman looks as unconscious
as she did it isn’t natural.
“Eh - oh, well no,
hardly,” he said, coming to himself; “I’ve
tried everything else, I believe. It can’t
be worse than carrying a bunch of sweet peas from
garden to garden.”
Mr. Dick stopped walking and turned
suddenly to stare at Mr. Pierce.
“Sweet - what?” he said.
Everybody else was talking, and I
was the only one who saw him change color.
“Sweet peas,” said Mr.
Pierce. “And that reminds me - I’d
like to make one condition, Mr. Carter. I feel
in a measure responsible for the company; most of
them have gone back to New York, but the leading woman
is sick at the hotel in Finleyville. I’d
like to bring her here for two weeks to recuperate.
I assure you, I have no interest in her, but I’m
sorry for her; she’s had the mumps.”
“Mumps!” everybody said
together, and Mr. Sam looked at his brother-in-law.
“Kid in the play got ’em,
and they spread around,” Mr. Pierce explained.
“Nasty disease.”
“Why, you’ve just had
them, too, Dicky!” said his wife. They all
turned to look at him, and I must say his expression
was curious.
Luckily, I had the wit to knock over
the breakfast basket, which was still there, and when
we’d gathered up the broken china, Mr. Dick had
got himself in hand.
“I’m sorry, old man,”
he said to Mr. Pierce, “but I’m not in
favor of bringing Miss - the person you speak
of - up to the sanatorium just now.
Mumps, you know - very contagious, and all
that.”
“She’s over that part,”
Mr. Pierce said; “she only needs to rest.”
“Certainly - let her
come,” said Mrs. Dicky. “If they’re
as contagious as all that, you haven’t been
afraid of my getting them.”
“I - I’m not
in favor of it,” Mr. Dick insisted, looking obstinate.
“The minute you bring an actress here you’ve
got the whole place by the ears.”
“Fiddlesticks!” said his
sister. “Because any actress could set you
by the ears -
Mrs. Dick sat up suddenly.
“Certainly, if she isn’t
well bring her up,” said Miss Patty. “Only - won’t
she know your name is not Carter?”
“She’s discretion itself,”
Mr. Pierce said. “Her salary hasn’t
been paid for a month, and as I’m responsible,
I’d be glad to see her looked after.”
“I don’t want her here.
I’ll - I’ll pay her board at the
hotel,” Mr. Dick began, “only for heaven’s
sake, don’t -
He stopped, for every one was staring.
“Why in the world would you
do that?” Miss Patty asked. “Don’t
be ridiculous. That’s the only condition
Mr. Pierce has made.”
Mr. Dick stalked to the window and
looked out, his hands in his pockets. I couldn’t
help being reminded of the time he had run away from
school, when his grandfather found him in the shelter-house
and gave him his choice of going back at once or reading
medicine with him.
“Oh, bring her up! Bring
her up!” he said without looking around.
“If Pierce won’t stay unless he can play
the friend in need, all right. But don’t
come after me if the whole blamed sanatorium swells
up with mumps and faints at the sight of a pickle.”
That was Wednesday.
Things at the sanatorium were about
the same on the surface. The women crocheted
and wondered what the next house doctor would be like,
and the men gambled at the slot-machines and played
billiards and grumbled at the food and the management,
and when they weren’t drinking spring water
they were in the bar washing away the taste of it.
They took twenty minutes on the verandas every day
for exercise and kept the house temperature at eighty.
Senator Biggs was still fasting and Mrs. Biggs took
to spending all day in the spring-house and turning
pale every time she heard his voice. It was that
day, I think, that I found the magazine with Upton
Sinclair’s article on fasting stuck fast in a
snow-drift, as if it had been thrown violently.
Wednesday afternoon Miss Julia Summers
came with three lap robes, a white lace veil and a
French poodle in a sleigh and went to bed in one of
the best rooms, and that night we started to move out
furniture to the shelter-house.
By working almost all night we got
the shelter-house fairly furnished, although we made
a trail through the snow that looked like a fever
chart. Toward daylight Mr. Sam dropped a wash-bowl
on my toe and I went to bed with an arnica compress.
I limped out in time to be on hand
before Miss Cobb got there, but what with a chilblain
on my heel and hardly any sleep for two nights - not
to mention my toe - I wasn’t any too
pleasant.
“It’s my opinion you’re
overeating, Minnie,” Miss Cobb said. “You’re
skin’s a sight!”
“You needn’t look at it,” I retorted.
She burned the back of her neck just
then and it was three minutes before she could speak.
When she could she was considerably milder.
“Just give it a twist or two,
Minnie, won’t you?” she said, holding out
the curler. “I haven’t been able to
sleep on the back of my head for three weeks.”
Well, I curled her hair for her and
she told me about Miss Summers being still shut in
her room, and how she’d offered Mike an extra
dollar to give the white poodle a Turkish bath - it
being under the weather as to health - and
how Mike had soaked the little beast for an hour in
a tub of water, forgetting the sulphur, and it had
come out a sort of mustard color, and how Miss Summers
had had hysterics when she saw it.
“Mike dipped him in bluing to
bleach him again, or rather ’her’ - it’s
name is Arabella - ” Miss Cobb said,
“but all it did was to make it mottled like
an Easter egg. Everybody is charmed. There
were no dogs allowed while the old doctor lived.
Things were different.”
“Yes, things were different,”
I assented, limping over to heat the curler.
“How - how does Mr. Carter get along?”
Miss Cobb put down her hand-mirror and sniffed.
“Well,” she said, “goodness
knows I’m no trouble maker, but somebody ought
to tell that young man a few things. He’s
forever looking at the thermometer and opening windows.
I declare, if I hadn’t brought my woolen tights
along I’d have frozen to death at breakfast.
Everybody’s complaining.”
I put that away in my mind to speak
about. It was only by nailing the windows shut
and putting strips of cotton batting around the cracks
that we’d ever been able to keep people there
in the winter. I had my first misgiving then.
Heaven knows I didn’t realize what it was going
to be.
Well, by the evening of that day things
were going fairly well. Tillie brought out a
basket every morning to me at the spring-house, fairly
bursting with curiosity, and Mr. Sam got some canned
stuff in Finleyville and took it after dark to the
shelter-house. But after the second day Mrs.
Dicky got tired holding a frying-pan over the fire
and I had to carry out at least one hot meal a day.
They got their own breakfast in a
chafing-dish, or rather he got it and carried it to
her. And she’d sit on the edge of her cot,
with her feet on the soap box - the floor
was drafty - wrapped in a pink satin negligee
with bands of brown fur on it, looking sweet and perfectly
happy, and let him feed her boiled egg with a spoon.
I took them some books - my Gray’s
Anatomy, and Jane Eyre and Molly Bawn, by The Duchess,
and the newspapers, of course. They were full
of talk about the wedding, and the suite the prince
was bringing over with him, and every now and then
a notice would say that Miss Dorothy Jennings, the
bride’s young sister, who was still in school
and was not coming out until next year, would be her
sister’s maid of honor. And when they came
to that, they would hug each other - or me,
if I happened to be close - and act like a
pair of children, which they were. Generally
it would end up by his asking her if she wasn’t
sorry she wasn’t back at Greenwich studying French
conjugations and having a dance without any men on
Friday nights, and she would say “Wretch!”
and kiss him, and I’d go out and slam the door.
But there was something on Mr. Dick’s
mind. I hadn’t known him for fourteen years
for nothing. And the night Mr. Sam and I carried
out the canned salmon and corn and tomatoes he walked
back with me to the edge of the deer park, Mr. Sam
having gone ahead.
“Now,” I said, when we
were out of ear-shot, “spit it out. I’ve
been expecting it.”
“Listen, Minnie,” he answered,
“is Ju - is Miss Summers still confined
to her room?”
“No,” I replied coldly.
“Ju - Miss Summers was down to-night
to dinner.”
“Then she’s seen Pierce,”
he said, “and he’s told her the whole story
and by to-morrow -
“What?” I demanded, clutching
his arm. “You wretched boy, don’t
tell me after all I’ve done.”
“Oh, confound it, Minnie,”
he exclaimed, “it’s as much your fault
as mine. Couldn’t you have found somebody
else, instead of getting, of all things on earth,
somebody from the Sweet Peas Company?”
“I see,” I said slowly.
“Then it wasn’t coincidence about
the mumps!”
“Confounded kid had them,”
he said with bitterness. “Minnie, something’s
got to be done, and done soon. If you want the
plain truth, Miss - er - Summers
and I used to be friends - and - well,
she’s suing me for breach of promise. Now
for heaven’s sake, Minnie, don’t make a
fuss -
But my knees wouldn’t hold me.
I dropped down in a snow-drift and covered my face.