For the next four days it seemed to
Dr. Archie that his patient might slip through his
hands, do what he might. But she did not.
On the contrary, after that she recovered very rapidly.
As her father remarked, she must have inherited the
“constitution” which he was never tired
of admiring in her mother.
One afternoon, when her new brother
was a week old, the doctor found Thea very comfortable
and happy in her bed in the parlor. The sunlight
was pouring in over her shoulders, the baby was asleep
on a pillow in a big rocking-chair beside her.
Whenever he stirred, she put out her hand and rocked
him. Nothing of him was visible but a flushed,
puffy forehead and an uncompromisingly big, bald cranium.
The door into her mother’s room stood open,
and Mrs. Kronborg was sitting up in bed darning stockings.
She was a short, stalwart woman, with a short neck
and a determined-looking head. Her skin was very
fair, her face calm and unwrinkled, and her yellow
hair, braided down her back as she lay in bed, still
looked like a girl’s. She was a woman whom
Dr. Archie respected; active, practical, unruffled;
goodhumored, but determined. Exactly the sort
of woman to take care of a flighty preacher. She
had brought her husband some property, too, one
fourth of her father’s broad acres in Nebraska, but
this she kept in her own name. She had profound
respect for her husband’s erudition and eloquence.
She sat under his preaching with deep humility, and
was as much taken in by his stiff shirt and white
neckties as if she had not ironed them herself by
lamplight the night before they appeared correct and
spotless in the pulpit. But for all this, she
had no confidence in his administration of worldly
affairs. She looked to him for morning prayers
and grace at table; she expected him to name the babies
and to supply whatever parental sentiment there was
in the house, to remember birthdays and anniversaries,
to point the children to moral and patriotic ideals.
It was her work to keep their bodies, their clothes,
and their conduct in some sort of order, and this
she accomplished with a success that was a source
of wonder to her neighbors. As she used to remark,
and her husband admiringly to echo, she “had
never lost one.” With all his flightiness,
Peter Kronborg appreciated the matter-of-fact, punctual
way in which his wife got her children into the world
and along in it. He believed, and he was right
in believing, that the sovereign State of Colorado
was much indebted to Mrs. Kronborg and women like her.
Mrs. Kronborg believed that the size
of every family was decided in heaven. More modern
views would not have startled her; they would simply
have seemed foolish thin chatter, like the
boasts of the men who built the tower of Babel, or
like Axel’s plan to breed ostriches in the chicken
yard. From what evidence Mrs. Kronborg formed
her opinions on this and other matters, it would have
been difficult to say, but once formed, they were
unchangeable. She would no more have questioned
her convictions than she would have questioned revelation.
Calm and even tempered, naturally kind, she was capable
of strong prejudices, and she never forgave.
When the doctor came in to see Thea,
Mrs. Kronborg was reflecting that the washing was
a week behind, and deciding what she had better do
about it. The arrival of a new baby meant a revision
of her entire domestic schedule, and as she drove
her needle along she had been working out new sleeping
arrangements and cleaning days. The doctor had
entered the house without knocking, after making noise
enough in the hall to prepare his patients. Thea
was reading, her book propped up before her in the
sunlight.
“Mustn’t do that; bad
for your eyes,” he said, as Thea shut the book
quickly and slipped it under the covers.
Mrs. Kronborg called from her bed:
“Bring the baby here, doctor, and have that
chair. She wanted him in there for company.”
Before the doctor picked up the baby,
he put a yellow paper bag down on Thea’s coverlid
and winked at her. They had a code of winks and
grimaces. When he went in to chat with her mother,
Thea opened the bag cautiously, trying to keep it
from crackling. She drew out a long bunch of
white grapes, with a little of the sawdust in which
they had been packed still clinging to them.
They were called Malaga grapes in Moonstone, and once
or twice during the winter the leading grocer got a
keg of them. They were used mainly for table decoration,
about Christmas-time. Thea had never had more
than one grape at a time before. When the doctor
came back she was holding the almost transparent fruit
up in the sunlight, feeling the pale-green skins softly
with the tips of her fingers. She did not thank
him; she only snapped her eyes at him in a special
way which he understood, and, when he gave her his
hand, put it quickly and shyly under her cheek, as
if she were trying to do so without knowing it and
without his knowing it.
Dr. Archie sat down in the rocking-chair.
“And how’s Thea feeling to-day?”
He was quite as shy as his patient,
especially when a third person overheard his conversation.
Big and handsome and superior to his fellow townsmen
as Dr. Archie was, he was seldom at his ease, and like
Peter Kronborg he often dodged behind a professional
manner. There was sometimes a contraction of
embarrassment and self consciousness all over his
big body, which made him awkward likely
to stumble, to kick up rugs, or to knock over chairs.
If any one was very sick, he forgot himself, but he
had a clumsy touch in convalescent gossip.
Thea curled up on her side and looked
at him with pleasure. “All right.
I like to be sick. I have more fun then than other
times.”
“How’s that?”
“I don’t have to go to
school, and I don’t have to practice. I
can read all I want to, and have good things,” she
patted the grapes. “I had lots of fun that
time I mashed my finger and you wouldn’t let
Professor Wunsch make me practice. Only I had
to do left hand, even then. I think that was
mean.”
The doctor took her hand and examined
the forefinger, where the nail had grown back a little
crooked. “You mustn’t trim it down
close at the corner there, and then it will grow straight.
You won’t want it crooked when you’re
a big girl and wear rings and have sweethearts.”
She made a mocking little face at
him and looked at his new scarf-pin. “That’s
the prettiest one you ev-er had. I wish you’d
stay a long while and let me look at it. What
is it?”
Dr. Archie laughed. “It’s
an opal. Spanish Johnny brought it up for me
from Chihuahua in his shoe. I had it set in Denver,
and I wore it to-day for your benefit.”
Thea had a curious passion for jewelry.
She wanted every shining stone she saw, and in summer
she was always going off into the sand hills to hunt
for crystals and agates and bits of pink chalcedony.
She had two cigar boxes full of stones that she had
found or traded for, and she imagined that they were
of enormous value. She was always planning how
she would have them set.
“What are you reading?”
The doctor reached under the covers and pulled out
a book of Byron’s poems. “Do you like
this?”
She looked confused, turned over a
few pages rapidly, and pointed to “My native
land, good-night.” “That,” she
said sheepishly.
“How about ’Maid of Athens’?”
She blushed and looked at him suspiciously.
“I like ’There was a sound of revelry,’”
she muttered.
The doctor laughed and closed the
book. It was clumsily bound in padded leather
and had been presented to the Reverend Peter Kronborg
by his Sunday-School class as an ornament for his
parlor table.
“Come into the office some day,
and I’ll lend you a nice book. You can
skip the parts you don’t understand. You
can read it in vacation. Perhaps you’ll
be able to understand all of it by then.”
Thea frowned and looked fretfully
toward the piano. “In vacation I have to
practice four hours every day, and then there’ll
be Thor to take care of.” She pronounced
it “Tor.”
“Thor? Oh, you’ve
named the baby Thor?” exclaimed the doctor.
Thea frowned again, still more fiercely,
and said quickly, “That’s a nice name,
only maybe it’s a little old fashioned.”
She was very sensitive about being thought a foreigner,
and was proud of the fact that, in town, her father
always preached in English; very bookish English,
at that, one might add.
Born in an old Scandinavian colony
in Minnesota, Peter Kronborg had been sent to a small
divinity school in Indiana by the women of a Swedish
evangelical mission, who were convinced of his gifts
and who skimped and begged and gave church suppers
to get the long, lazy youth through the seminary.
He could still speak enough Swedish to exhort and to
bury the members of his country church out at Copper
Hole, and he wielded in his Moonstone pulpit a somewhat
pompous English vocabulary he had learned out of books
at college. He always spoke of “the infant
Saviour,” “our Heavenly Father,”
etc. The poor man had no natural, spontaneous
human speech. If he had his sincere moments,
they were perforce inarticulate. Probably a good
deal of his pretentiousness was due to the fact that
he habitually expressed himself in a book learned
language, wholly remote from anything personal, native,
or homely. Mrs. Kronborg spoke Swedish to her
own sisters and to her sister-in-law Tillie, and colloquial
English to her neighbors. Thea, who had a rather
sensitive ear, until she went to school never spoke
at all, except in monosyllables, and her mother was
convinced that she was tongue-tied. She was still
inept in speech for a child so intelligent. Her
ideas were usually clear, but she seldom attempted
to explain them, even at school, where she excelled
in “written work” and never did more than
mutter a reply.
“Your music professor stopped
me on the street to-day and asked me how you were,”
said the doctor, rising. “He’ll be
sick himself, trotting around in this slush with no
overcoat or overshoes.”
“He’s poor,” said Thea simply.
The doctor sighed. “I’m
afraid he’s worse than that. Is he always
all right when you take your lessons? Never acts
as if he’d been drinking?”
Thea looked angry and spoke excitedly.
“He knows a lot. More than anybody.
I don’t care if he does drink; he’s old
and poor.” Her voice shook a little.
Mrs. Kronborg spoke up from the next
room. “He’s a good teacher, doctor.
It’s good for us he does drink. He’d
never be in a little place like this if he didn’t
have some weakness. These women that teach music
around here don’t know nothing. I wouldn’t
have my child wasting time with them. If Professor
Wunsch goes away, Thea’ll have nobody to take
from. He’s careful with his scholars; he
don’t use bad language. Mrs. Kohler is
always present when Thea takes her lesson. It’s
all right.” Mrs. Kronborg spoke calmly
and judicially. One could see that she had thought
the matter out before.
“I’m glad to hear that,
Mrs. Kronborg. I wish we could get the old man
off his bottle and keep him tidy. Do you suppose
if I gave you an old overcoat you could get him to
wear it?” The doctor went to the bedroom door
and Mrs. Kronborg looked up from her darning.
“Why, yes, I guess he’d
be glad of it. He’ll take most anything
from me. He won’t buy clothes, but I guess
he’d wear ’em if he had ’em.
I’ve never had any clothes to give him, having
so many to make over for.”
“I’ll have Larry bring
the coat around to-night. You aren’t cross
with me, Thea?” taking her hand.
Thea grinned warmly. “Not
if you give Professor Wunsch a coat and
things,” she tapped the grapes significantly.
The doctor bent over and kissed her.