The nurse of Mrs. Ridley had found
her in a nervous chill, at which she was greatly troubled.
More clothing was laid upon the bed, and bottles of
hot water placed to her feet. To all this Mrs.
Ridley made no objection-remained, in fact,
entirely passive and irresponsive, like one in a partial
stupor, from which she did not, to all appearance,
rally even after the chill had subsided.
She lay with her eyes shut, her lips
pressed together and her forehead drawn into lines,
and an expression of pain on her face, answering only
in dull monosyllables to the inquiries made every now
and then by her nurse, who hovered about the bed and
watched over her with anxious solicitude.
As she feared, fever symptoms began
to show themselves. The evening had worn away,
and it was past ten o’clock. It would not
do to wait until morning in a case like this, and
so a servant was sent to the office of Dr. Hillhouse,
with a request that he would come immediately.
She returned saying that the doctor was not at home.
Mrs. Ridley lay with her eyes shut,
but the nurse knew by the expression of her face that
she was not asleep. The paleness of her countenance
had given way to a fever hue, and she noticed occasional
restless movements of the hands, twitches of the eyelids
and nervous starts. To her questions the patient
gave no satisfactory answers.
An hour elapsed, and still the doctor
did not make his appearance. The servant was
called and questioned. She was positive about
having left word for the doctor to come immediately
on returning home.
“Is that snow?” inquired
Mrs. Ridley, starting up in bed and listening.
The wind had risen suddenly and swept in a gusty dash
against the windows, rattling on the glass the fine
hard grains which had been falling for some time.
She remained leaning on her arm and
listening for some moments, while an almost frightened
look came into her face.
“What time is it?” she asked.
“After eleven o’clock,” replied
the nurse.
All at once the storm seemed to have
awakened into a wild fury. More loudly it rushed
and roared and dashed its sand-like snow against the
windows of Mrs. Ridley’s chamber. The sick
woman shivered and the fever-flush died out of her
face.
“You must lie down!” said
the nurse, speaking with decision and putting her
hands on Mrs. Ridley to press her back. But the
latter resisted.
“Indeed, indeed, ma’am,”
urged the nurse, showing great anxiety, “you
must lie down and keep covered up in bed. It might
be the death of you.”
“Oh, that’s awful!”
exclaimed Mrs. Ridley as the wind went howling by
and the snow came in heavier gusts against the windows.
“Past eleven, did you say?”
“Yes, ma’am, and the doctor
ought to have been here long ago. I wonder why
he doesn’t come?”
“Hark! wasn’t that our
bell?” cried Mrs. Ridley, bending forward in
a listening attitude.
The nurse opened the chamber door
and stood hearkening for a moment or two. Not
hearing the servant stir, she ran quickly down stairs
to the street door and drew it open, but found no
one.
There was a look of suspense and fear
in Mrs. Ridley’s face when the nurse came back:
“Who was it?”
“No one,” replied the nurse. “The
wind deceived you.”
A groan came from Mrs. Ridley’s
lips as she sank down upon the bed, where, with her
face hidden, she lay as still as if sleeping.
She did not move nor speak for the space of more than
half an hour, and all the while her nurse waited and
listened through the weird, incessant noises of the
storm for the coming of Dr. Hillhouse, but waited and
listened in vain.
All at once, as if transferred to
within a few hundred rods of these anxious watchers,
the great clock of the city, which in the still hours
of a calm night could be heard ringing out clear but
afar off, threw a resonant clang upon the air, pealing
the first stroke of the hour of twelve. Mrs.
Ridley started up in bed with a scared look on her
face. Away the sound rolled, borne by the impetuous
wind-wave that had caught it up as the old bell shivered
it off, and carried it away so swiftly that it seemed
to die almost in the moment it was born. The listeners
waited, holding their breaths. Then, swept from
the course this first peal had taken, the second came
to their ears after a long interval muffled and from
a distance, followed almost instantly by the third,
which went booming past them louder than the first.
And so, with strange intervals and variations of time
and sound as the wind dashed wildly onward or broke
and swerved from its course, the noon of night was
struck, and the silence that for a brief time succeeded
left a feeling of awe upon the hearts of these lonely
women.
To the ears of another had come these
strange and solemn tones, struck out at midnight away
up in the clear rush of the tempest, and swept away
in a kind of mad sport, and tossed about in the murky
sky. To the ears of another, who, struggling
and battling with the storm, had made his way with
something of a blind instinct to within a short distance
of his home, every stroke of the clock seemed to come
from a different quarter; and when the last peal rang
out, it left him in helpless bewilderment. When
he staggered on again, it was in a direction opposite
to that in which he had been going. For ten minutes
he wrought with the blinding and suffocating snow,
which, turn as he would, the wind kept dashing into
his face, and then his failing limbs gave out and
he sunk benumbed with cold upon the pavement.
Half buried in the snow, he was discovered soon afterward
and carried to a police station, where he found himself
next morning in one of the cells, a wretched, humiliated,
despairing man.
“Why, Mr. Ridley! It can’t
be possible!” It was the exclamation of the
police magistrate when this man was brought, soon after
daylight, before him.
Ridley stood dumb in presence of the
officer, who was touched by the helpless misery of
his face.
“You were at Mr. Birtwell’s?”
Ridley answered by a silent inclination of his head.
“I do not wonder,” said
the magistrate, his voice softening, “that, you
lost your way in the storm last night. You are
not the only one who found himself astray and at fault.
Our men had to take care of quite a number of Mr.
Birtwell’s guests. But I will not detain
you, Mr. Ridley. I am sorry this has happened.
You must be more careful in future.”
With slow steps and bowed head Mr.
Ridley left the station-house and took his way homeward.
How could he meet his wife? What of her?
How had she passed the night? Vividly came up
the parting scene as she lay with her babe, only a
few days old, close against her bosom, her tender
eyes, in which he saw shadows of fear, fixed lovingly
upon his face.
He had promised to be home soon, and
had said a fervent “God bless you!” as
he left a kiss warm upon her lips.
And now! He stood still, a groan
breaking on the air. Go home! How could
he look into the face of his wife again? She had
walked with him through the valley of humiliation
in sorrow and suffering and shame for years, and now,
after going up from this valley and bearing her to
a pleasant land of hope and happiness, he had plunged
down madly. Then a sudden fear smote his heart.
She was in no condition to bear a shock such as his
absence all night must have caused. The consequences
might be fatal. He started forward at a rapid
pace, hurrying along until he came in sight of his
house. A carriage stood at the door. What
could this mean?
Entering, he was halfway up stairs
when, the nurse met him.
“Oh, Mr. Ridley,” she
exclaimed, “why did you stay away all night?
Mrs. Ridley has been so ill, and I couldn’t
get the doctor. Oh, sir, I don’t know what
will come of it. She’s in a dreadful way-out
of her head. I sent for Dr. Hillhouse last night,
but he didn’t come.”
She spoke in a rapid manner, showing
much alarm and agitation.
“Is Dr. Hillhouse here now?”
asked Mr. Ridley, trying to repress his feelings.
“No, sir. He sent Dr. Angier,
but I don’t trust much in him. Dr. Hillhouse
ought to see her right away. But you do look awful,
sir!”
The nurse fixed her eyes upon him
in a half-wondering stare.
Mr. Ridley broke from her, and passing
up the stairs in two or three long strides, made his
way to the bath-room, where in a few moments he changed
as best he could his disordered appearance, and then
hurried to his wife’s chamber.
A wild cry of joy broke from her lips
as she saw him enter; but when he came near, she put
up her hands and shrunk away from him, saying in a
voice that fairly wailed, it was so full of disappointment:
“I thought it was Ralph-my
dear, good Ralph! Why don’t he come home?”
Her cheeks were red with fever and
her eyes bright and shining. She had started
up in bed on hearing her husband’s step, but
now shrunk down under the clothing and turned her
face away.
“Blanche! Blanche!”
Mr. Ridley called the name of his wife tenderly as
he stood leaning over her.
Moving her head slowly, like one in
doubt, she looked at him in a curious, questioning
way. Then, closing her eyes, she turned her face
from him again.
“Blanche! Blanche!”
For all the response that came, Mr. Ridley might as
well have spoken to deaf ears. Dr. Angier laid
his hand on his arm and drew him away:
“She must have as little to
disturb her as possible, Mr. Ridley. The case
is serious.”
“Where is Dr. Hillhouse?
Why did not he come?” demanded Mr. Ridley.
“He will be here after a while.
It is too early for him,” replied Dr. Angier.
“He must come now. Go for him at once,
doctor.”
“If you say so,” returned
Doctor Angier, with some coldness of manner; “but
I cannot tell how soon he will be here. He does
not go out until after eight or nine o’clock,
and there are two or three pressing cases besides
this.”
“I will go,” said Mr.
Ridley. “Don’t think me rude or uncourteous,
Dr. Angier. I am like one distracted. Stay
here until I get back. I will bring Dr. Hillhouse.”
“Take my carriage-it
is at the door; and say to Dr. Hillhouse from me that
I would like him to come immediately,” Dr. Angier
replied to this.
Mr. Ridley ran down stairs, and springing
into the carriage, ordered the driver to return with
all possible speed to the office. Dr. Hillhouse
was in bed, but rose on getting the summons from Dr.
Angier and accompanied Mr. Ridley. He did not
feel in a pleasant humor. The night’s indulgence
in wine and other allurements of the table had not
left his head clear nor his nerves steady for the morning.
A sense of physical discomfort made him impatient
and irritable. At first all the conditions of
this case were not clear to him; but as his thought
went back to the incidents of the night, and he remembered
not only seeing Mr. Ridley in considerable excitement
from drink, but hearing it remarked upon by one or
two persons who were familiar with his life at Washington,
the truth dawned upon his mind, and he said abruptly,
with considerable sternness of manner and in a quick
voice:
“At what time did you get home last night?”
Ridley made no reply.
“Or this morning? It was
nearly midnight when I left, and you were still
there, and, I am sorry to say, not in the best condition
for meeting a sick wife at home. If there is
anything seriously wrong in this case, the responsibility
lies, I am afraid, at your door, sir.”
They were in the carriage, moving
rapidly. Mr. Ridley sat-with his head drawn down
and bent a little forward; not answering, Dr. Hillhouse
said no more. On arriving at Mr. Ridley’s
residence, he met Dr. Angier, with whom he held a
brief conference before seeing his patient. He
found her in no favorable condition. The fever
was not so intense as Dr. Angier had found it on his
arrival, but its effect on the brain was more marked.
“Too much time has been lost.”
Dr. Hillhouse spoke aside to his assistant à’s
they sat together watching carefully every symptom
of their patient.
“I sent for you before ten o’clock
last night,” said the nurse, who overheard the
remark and wished to screen herself from any blame.
Dr. Hillhouse did not reply.
“I knew there was danger,”
pursued the nurse. “Oh, doctor, if you had
only come when I sent for you! I waited and waited
until after midnight.”
The doctor growled an impatient response,
but so muttered and mumbled the words that the nurse
could not make them out. Mr. Ridley was in the
room, standing with folded arms a little way from the
bed, stern and haggard, with wild, congested eyes
and closely shut mouth, a picture of anguish, fear
and remorse.
The two physicians remained with Mrs.
Ridley for over twenty minutes before deciding on
their line of treatment. A prescription was then
made, and careful instructions given to the nurse.
“I will call again in the course
of two or three hours,” said Dr. Hillhouse,
on going away. “Should any thing unfavorable
occur, send to the office immediately.”
“Doctor!” Mr. Ridley laid
his hand on the arm of Dr. Hillhouse. “What
of my wife?” There was a frightened look in his
pale, agitated face. His voice shook.
“She is in danger,” replied the doctor.
“But you know what to do?
You can control the disease? You have had such
cases before?”
“I will do my best,” answered
the doctor, trying to move on; but Mr. Ridley clutched
his arm tightly and held him fast:
“Is it-is it-puer-p-p-”
His voice shook so that he could not articulate the
word that was on his tongue.
“I am afraid so,” returned the doctor.
A deep groan broke from the lips of
Mr. Ridley. His hand dropped from the arm of
Dr. Hillhouse and he stood trembling from head to foot,
then cried out in a voice of unutterable despair:
“From heaven down to hell in one wild leap!
God help me!”
Dr. Hillhouse was deeply moved at
this. He had felt stern and angry, ready each
moment to accuse and condemn, but the intense emotion
displayed by the husband shocked, subdued and changed
his tone of feeling.
“You must calm, yourself, my
dear sir,” he said. “The case looks
bad, but I have seen recovery in worse cases than
this. We will do our best. But remember
that you have duties and responsibilities that must
not fail.”
“Whatsoever in me lies, doctor,”
answered Mr. Ridley, with a sudden calmness that seemed
supernatural, “you may count on my doing.
If she dies, I am lost.” There was a deep
solemnity in his tones as he uttered this last sentence.
“You see, sir,” he added, “what I
have at stake.”
“Just for the present little
more can be done than to follow the prescriptions
we have given and watch their effect on the patient,”
returned Dr. Hillhouse. “If any change occurs,
favorable or unfavorable, let us know. If your
presence in her room should excite or disturb her
in any way, you must prudently abstain from going near
her.”
The two physicians went away with
but little hope in their hearts for the sick woman.
Whatever the exciting cause or causes might have been,
the disease which had taken hold of her with unusual
violence presented already so fatal a type that the
issue was very doubtful.