CHURCH-GOING CLOTHES
After his few words to Dorothy the
wounded man lapsed again into coma, in which condition
he was found by the physician, who returned with Santry
from Crawling Water. During the long intervening
time the girl had not moved from the bedside, though
the strain of her own terrible experience with Moran
was making itself felt in exhaustive fatigue.
“Go and rest yourself,” Santry urged.
“It’s my turn now.”
“I’m not tired,”
she declared, trying to smile into the keen eyes of
the doctor, who had heard the facts from the old plainsman
as they rode out from town.
Wade lay with his eyes closed, apparently
in profound stupor, but gave signs of consciousness
when Dr. Catlin gently shook him. Dorothy felt
that he should not be disturbed, although she kept
her own counsel, but Catlin wanted to see if he could
arouse his patient at all, for the extent of the injury
caused by the bullet, which had entered the back in
the vicinity of the spinal cord, could be gauged largely
by the amount of sensibility remaining. The wounded
man was finally induced to answer monosyllabically
the questions put to him, but he did so with surly
impatience. The physician next made a thorough
examination, for which he was better fitted than many
a fashionable city practitioner, by reason of his
familiarity with wounds of all kinds.
When he arose Santry, who had watched
him as a cat watches a mouse, forced himself to speak,
for his throat and mouth were dry as a bone.
“Well, Doc, how about it?”
“Oh, he won’t die this
time; but he may lie there for some weeks. So
far as I can tell the bullet just grazed the spinal
cord, and it’s the shock of that which makes
him so quiet now. A fraction of an inch closer
and he would have died or been paralyzed, a cripple,
probably for life. At is it, however, barring
the possibility of infection, he should pull through.
The bullet passed straight through the body without
injury to any vital organ, and there is no indication
of severe internal hemorrhage.”
Santry moistened his lips with his
tongue and shook his head heavily.
“What gets me,” he burst
out, “is that Gawd A’mighty could ‘a’
let a skunk like Moran do a thing like that!
And then” his voice swelled as though
the words he was about to utter exceeded the first “and
then let the varmint get away from me!”
Dr. Catlin nodded sympathy with the
statement and turned to Dorothy. She had been
anxiously searching his face to discover if he were
encouraging them unduly, and when she felt that he
was not stretching the facts a tremendous weight was
lifted from her mind.
“You are going to stay here?” he asked.
“Yes; oh, yes!” she answered.
“That’s good.”
He opened his medicine case and mixed a simple antipyretic.
“I’ll explain what you’re to do then.
After that you better lay down and try to sleep.
Wade won’t need much for some days, except good
nursing.”
“I’m not tired,” she insisted, at
which he smiled shrewdly.
“I’m not asking you if
you’re tired. I’m telling you that
you are. Those nerves of yours are jumping now.
You’ve got our patient to consider first, and
you can’t look after him unless you keep well
yourself. I’m going to mix something up
for you in a few minutes and then you’re going
to rest. A nurse must obey orders.”
He explained to her what she was to
do for the patient and then gave her something to
offset the effects of her own nervous shock. Then
counseling them not to worry too much, for there would
be no fatal result if his directions were followed,
the physician mounted his horse and rode back to town.
Such journeys were all in the day’s work to him,
and poor pay they often brought him, except as love
of his fellow-men rewarded his spirit.
During the long days and nights that
followed Dorothy scarcely left Wade’s bedside,
for to her mother now fell the burdens of the ranch
household. From feeling that she never would be
equal to the task of caring for so many people, Mrs.
Purnell came to find her health greatly improved by
her duties, which left her no opportunity for morbid
introspection.
Santry, too, was in almost constant
attendance upon the sick man, and was as tender and
solicitous in his ministrations as Dorothy herself.
He ate little and slept less, relieving his feelings
by oaths whispered into his mustache. He made
the ranch hands move about their various duties as
quietly as mice. Dorothy grew to be genuinely
fond of him, because of their common bond of sympathy
with Wade. Frequently they sat together in the
sickroom reading the newspapers, which came out from
town each day. On one such occasion, when Santry
had twisted his mouth awry in a determined effort
to fold the paper he was reading without permitting
a single crackle, she softly laughed at him.
“You needn’t be so careful.
I don’t think it would disturb him.”
The old fellow sagely shook his head.
“Just the same, I ain’t takin’ no
chances,” he said.
A moment afterward he tiptoed over
to her, grinning from ear to ear, and with a clumsy
finger pointed out the item he had been reading.
An expression of pleased surprise flooded her face
when she read it; they laughed softly together; and,
finding that he was through with the paper, she put
it away in a bureau drawer, meaning to show that item
some day to Gordon.
Under the care of Dr. Catlin who rode
out from Crawling Water each day, and even more because
of Dorothy’s careful nursing, the wounded man
was at last brought beyond the danger point and started
on the road to health. He was very weak and very
pale, but the one danger that Catlin had feared and
kept mostly to himself, the danger of blood-poisoning,
was now definitely past, and the patient’s physical
condition slowly brought about a thorough and complete
recovery.
“Some of it you owe to yourself,
Wade, as the reward of decent living, and some of
it you owe to the Lord,” Catlin told him smilingly.
“But most of it you owe to this little girl
here.” He patted Dorothy on the shoulder
and would not permit her to shirk his praise.
“She’s been your nurse, and I can tell
you it isn’t a pleasant job for a woman, tending
a wound like yours.”
“Is that so?” said Dorothy,
mischievously. “That’s as much as
you know about it. It’s been one of the
most delightful jobs I ever had.”
“She’s a wonderful girl,”
said Wade, with a tender look at her, after they had
laughed at her outburst.
“Oh, you just think that because
I’m the only girl around here,” she blushingly
declared, and the physician kept right on laughing.
“There was another girl
here once,” said Wade. “Or at least
she acted somewhat differently from anything you’ve
done lately.”
He was well enough now to receive
his friends on brief visits, and Trowbridge was the
first to drop in. Dorothy did not mind having
Lem, but she was not sure she enjoyed having the others,
for she had found the close association with Gordon
so very sweet; but she told herself that she must
not be foolish, and she welcomed all who came.
Naturally so pretty a girl doing the honors of the
house so well, and so closely linked with the fortunes
of the host, gave rise to the usual deductions.
Many were the quiet jokes which the cattlemen passed
amongst themselves over the approaching wedding, and
the festival they would make of the occasion.
“Well, good-by, Miss Purnell,”
said Trowbridge one day, smiling and yet with a curiously
pathetic droop to his mouth.
“Miss Purnell?”
Dorothy exclaimed, in the act of shaking hands.
“That’s what I said.”
He nodded wisely. “Good-by, Miss Purnell.”
Refusing to be envious of his friend’s good fortune,
he laughed cheerily and was gone before she saw through
his little joke.
The next afternoon she was reading
to Gordon when the far-away look in his eyes told
her that he was not listening. She stopped, wondering
what he could be dreaming about, and missing the sound
of her voice, he looked toward her.
“You weren’t even listening,” she
chided, smilingly.
“I was thinking that I’ve
never had a chance to get into those church-going
clothes,” he said, with a return of the old whimsical
mood. “But I look pretty clean, don’t
I?”
“Yes,” she answered, suddenly shy.
“Hair brushed? Tie right? Boots clean?”
To each question she had nodded assent.
Her heart was beating very fast and the rosy color
was mounting to the roots of her hair, but she refused
to lower her eyes in panic. She looked him straight
in the face with a sweet, tender, cool gaze.
“Yes,” she said again.
“Well, then, give me your hand.”
He hitched his rocker forward so as to get closer
to her, and took both her hands in this. “Dorothy,
I’ve got something to tell you. I guess
you know what it is.” Her eyes suddenly
became a little moist as she playfully shook her head.
“Oh, yes, you do, dear, but I’ve got to
say it, haven’t I? I love you, Dorothy.
It sort of chokes me to say it because my heart’s
so full.”
“Mine is, too,” she whispered,
a queer catch in her voice. “But are you
sure you love me?”
“Sure? Why, that other was only....”
Withdrawing her hands from his, she
laid her fingers for an instant on his lips.
“I want to show you something,” she said.
She went to the bureau, and taking
out the paper which she had hidden there, brought
it to him. It was a moment before she could find
the item again, then she pointed it out. They
read it together, as she and Santry had done the first
time she had seen it. The item was an announcement
from the Rexhills of the engagement of their daughter
Helen to Mr. Maxwell Frayne.
Dorothy watched Wade’s face
eagerly as he read, and she was entirely content when
she saw there no trace of his former sentiment for
Helen Rexhill. He expressed genuine pleasure
that Helen was not to be carried down with her father’s
ruin, but the girl knew that otherwise the news had
left him untouched. She had always thought that
this would be so, but she was comforted to be assured
of it.
“Why, that was only an infatuation,”
he explained. “Now I’m really in
love. Thank Heaven, I....” When she
looked at him there was a light in her glorious violet-shaded
eyes that fairly took his breath away.
“Hush, dear,” she said
softly. “You’ve said enough.
I understand, and I’m so....”
The rest was lost to the world as
his arms went around her.