Elliott was wretchedly, miserably ill. She despised herself for it and then she lost even the sensation of self contempt in utter misery. She didn’t care about anything—who helped her undress or where the undressing was done or what happened to her. Mercifully nobody talked; it would have killed her, she thought, to have to try to talk. They didn’t even ask her how she felt. They only moved about quietly and did things. They put her to bed and gave her something to drink, after which for a time she didn’t care if she did die; in fact, she rather hoped she would; and then the disgusting things happened and she felt worse
“I am so sorry!” she murmured apologetically to a presence beside the bed. “I have made you a horrid lot of trouble.”
“Not a bit,” said the presence, quietly. “So don’t you begin worrying about that.”
And she didn’t worry. It seemed impossible to worry about anything just then.
“I feel lots better,” she remarked, after a while.
“That’s right. I thought you would. Now I’m going to telephone your Aunt Jessica that you feel better, and you just lie quiet and go to sleep. Then you will feel better still. I’ll put the bell right here beside the bed. If you want anything, tap it.”
The presence waddled away—the girl could feel its going in the tremor of the bed
But the first thing she knew she was waking up and the room was quite dark and she felt comfortable, but just the least bit queer. It couldn’t be that she was hungry!
She lay and debated the point drowsily until a streak of light fell across the bed. The light came from a kerosene lamp in the hands of an immense woman whose mild blue eyes beamed on Elliott.
“There, you’ve waked up, haven’t you? I guess you’ll like a glass of milk now. You can bring it right up, Harriet. She’s awake.”
The woman set down her lamp on a little table and lumbered about the room, adjusting the shades at the windows, while the lamp threw grotesque exaggerations on the wall. Elliott watched the shadows, a warm little smile at her heart. They were funny, but she found herself tender toward them. When the woman padded back to the bed the girl smiled, her cheek pillowed on her hand. She liked her there beside the bed, her big shapeless form totally obscuring the straight-backed chair. She didn’t think of waist lines or clothes at all, only of how comfortable
“I telephoned your Aunt Jessica,” said the big woman. “She was just going to call us, and they all sent their love to you. Here’s Harriet with the milk. Do you feel a mite hungry?”
“I think that must be what was the matter with me. I was trying to decide when you came in.”
The fat form shook all over with silent laughter. It was fascinating to watch laughter that produced such a cataclysm but made no sound. Elliott forgot to drink in her absorption.
“Mother,” said Harriet Gordon, “Elliott thinks you’re a three-ringed circus.
Elliott protested, startled. “I think you are the kindest people in the world, both of you!”
“Mercy, child, anybody would have done the same! Don’t you go to setting us up on pedestals for a little thing like that.”
The fat girl was smiling. “Make it singular, mother. I have no quarrel with a pedestal for you, though it might be a little awkward to move about on.”
Mrs. Gordon shook again with that fascinating laughter. “Mercy me! I’d tip off first thing and then where would we all be?”
Elliott’s eyes sought Harriet Gordon’s. If she had observed closely she would have seen spots on the white dress, but to-night she was not looking at clothes. She only thought what a kind face the big girl had and how extraordinarily pleasant her voice was and what good friends she
“There!” said Mrs. Gordon. “You drank up every drop, didn’t you? You must have been hungry. Now you go right to sleep again and I’ll miss my guess if you don’t feel real good in the morning.”
“Good night,” said Harriet from the door. “Did you give Blink her good-night mouthful, Mother?”
“No, I didn’t. How I do forget that cat!” said Mrs. Gordon. She turned down the sheet under Elliott’s chin, patted it a little, and asked, “Don’t you want your pillow turned over?” Then quite naturally she stooped down and kissed the girl. “I guess you’re all right now. Good night.” And Elliott put both arms around her neck and hugged her, big as she was. “Good night,” she said softly.
The next time Elliott woke up it was broad daylight. Her eyes opened on a
She dressed as quickly as she could and went down-stairs. Harriet was shelling peas on the big veranda that looked off across the valley to the mountains. There
“Mother said to let you sleep as long as you would.” Harriet stopped the current of apology on Elliott’s lips. “Did you have a good night?”
“Splendid! I didn’t know a thing from the time your mother went out of the room until half an hour ago.”
“Didn’t know anything about the thunder-shower?”
“Was there a thunder-shower?”
“A big one. It put our telephone out of commission.”
“I didn’t hear it,” said Elliott.
“It almost pays to be sick, to find out how good it feels to be well, doesn’t it? Here’s a glass of milk. Drink that while I get your breakfast.”
“Can’t I do it? I hate to make you more trouble.”
“Trouble? Forget that word! We
Now, Elliott wanted to get home at once; she had been longing ever since she woke up to see Mother Jess and Laura and Father Bob and Henry and Bruce and everybody else on the Cameron farm, not omitting Prince and the chickens and the “black and whitey” calf; but she thought rapidly: if it really made things any easier for the Gordons to have her here—
“Why, yes, I can stay if you want me to.” It cost her something to say those words, but she said them with a smile.
“Good! I’ll telephone Mrs. Cameron that we will bring you home this afternoon. I’ll go over to the Blisses’ to do it, though maybe their telephone’s knocked out, too. The one at our hired man’s house isn’t working. Here comes Mother with an egg the hen has just laid for your breakfast.”
“It is, straw and cobwebs. Where have you been, Mother? You know you haven’t any business in the haymow or crawling under the old carryall. Why don’t you let Alma bring in the eggs? She’s little and spry.”
“Pooh!” said Mrs. Gordon, with one of her silent laughs. “Pooh, pooh! Alma isn’t any match for old Whitefoot yet. You’d think that hen laid awake nights thinking up outlandish places to lay her eggs in. Wait till you get to be sixty, Harriet. Then you’ll know you can’t let folks wait on you. Before that it’s all right, but after sixty you’ve got to do for yourself, if you don’t want to grow old.—Two, dearie? I’m going to make you a drop-egg on toast for your breakfast.”
“Oh, no, one!” cried Elliott. “I never
“Why, yes, you can dish up your oatmeal,” calmly cracking a second egg. “’T won’t do a mite of harm to have two. Maybe you’re hungrier than you think. Now Harriet, the water, and we’re all ready. I’ll help you finish those peas while she eats.”
The woman and the girl shelled peas, their fat fingers fairly flying through the pods, while Elliott devoured both eggs and a bowl of oatmeal and a pitcher of cream and a dish of blueberries and wondered how they could make their fingers move so fast.
“Practice,” said Mrs. Gordon in answer to the girl’s query. “You do a thing over and over enough times and you get so you can’t help doing it fast, if you’ve got any gumption at all. The quarts of peas I’ve shelled in my life time would feed an army, I guess.”
“Don’t you ever get tired?”
“Tired of shelling peas? Land no, I like it! I can sit in here and look at you, or out on the back piazza and watch the mountains, or on the front step and see folks drive by, and I’ve always got my thoughts.” A shadow crossed the placid face. “My thoughts work better when my fingers are busy. I’d hate to just sit and hold my hands. Ted dared me once to try it for an hour. That was the longest hour I ever spent.”
Mrs. Gordon had risen to peer through the window after a rapidly receding wagon.
“There!” she said. “There goes that woman from Bayfield I want to sell some of my bees to. She’s going down to Blisses’ and I’d better walk right over and talk to her, as the telephone won’t work. I ’most think one hive is going to swarm this morning, but I guess I’ll have time to get back before they come out.
“All right,” lisped the small solemn-eyed urchin who had strayed in from the kitchen and now stood in the door hitching at a diminutive pair of trousers and eying Elliott absorbedly. “Gone!” he announced suddenly; coming out of his scrutiny.
“What, your button?” Harriet pulled him up to her. “I’ll sew it on in a jiffy. Don’t worry about the bees, Mother. I can manage them, if they decide to swarm before you get back, and while you’re at the Blisses’ just telephone central our phone’s out of order—and oh, please tell Mrs. Cameron we’re keeping Elliott till afternoon.”
Mrs. Gordon departed and Harriet sewed on the button. “There, Johnny, now you’re all right. You can run out and play.”
But Johnny became suddenly galvanized into action. He dived into a small pocket
“If that isn’t provoking!” said Harriet, when she had read it. “Why didn’t you give me this the first thing, Johnny? Then Mother could have done this telephoning, too, at the Blisses’.”
“What is it?” asked Elliott.
“A message Johnny’s mother wants sent. She’s our hired man’s wife and I must say at times she shows about as much brains as a chicken. You’d think she’d know our ’phone wouldn’t be likely to work, if hers didn’t. Now I shall have to go over to the Blisses’ myself, I suppose. The message seems fairly important. Where has your mother gone, Johnny?”
But Johnny didn’t know; beyond a vague “she wided away” he was non-committal.
“She might have stopped somewhere and telephoned for herself, I should think,” grumbled Harriet. “I’ll be back
“I’ll stay here, I think, and wash up my dishes. And after that I’ll finish the peas.”
“Mercy me, I shan’t be gone that long! We’re shelling these to put up, you know. Don’t bother about washing your dishes, either. They’ll keep.”
“Who’s saying bother, now?” Elliott’s dimples twinkled mischievously.
Harriet laughed. “You and Johnny can mind the place. The men and Alma are all off at the lower farm and here goes the last woman. Good-by.”
Elliott went briskly about her program. She found soap and a pan and rinsed her dishes under the hot-water faucet. Then she sat down to the peas. Johnny, who had followed her about for a while, deserted her for pressing affairs of his own out-of-doors. Elliott pinched the pods as
She was thinking about this when she heard something that made her first stop her work to listen and then jump up hurriedly, spilling the peas out of her lap. The wailing of a terrified child was coming nearer and nearer. Elliott set down the peas that were left and ran out on the veranda. There was Johnny stumbling up the path, crying at the top of his lungs.
“Why, Johnny!” She ran toward him. “Why, Johnny, what is the matter?”
Johnny precipitated himself into her arms in a torrent of tears. Not a word was distinguishable, but his wails pierced the girl’s ear-drums.
“Johnny! Johnny, stop it! Tell me where you’re hurt.”
But Johnny only sobbed the harder. He couldn’t be in danger of death—could he?—when he screamed so. That showed his lungs were all right, and his legs worked, too, and his arms. They were digging into her now, with a force that almost upset her equilibrium. Could something be wrong inside of him?
“What’s the matter, Johnny? Stop crying and tell me.”
Johnny’s yells slackened for want of breath. He held up one brown little hand. She inspected it. Dirty, of course, unspeakably, but otherwise—Oh, there was a bunch on one knuckle, a bunch that was swelling. “Is that where it hurts you, Johnny?”
Johnny nodded, gulping.
“Did something sting you?”
“Bee stung Johnny. Naughty bee!”
The girl stared at the small grimy hand in consternation. A bee sting! What did you do for a bee sting or any kind of
Johnny’s screams, abated in expectation of relief, began to rise once more. He was angry. Why didn’t she do something? This delay was unendurable. His voice mounted in a long, piercing wail.
“Don’t cry,” the girl said nervously. “Don’t cry. Let’s go into the house and find something.”
Up-stairs and down she trailed the shrieking child. At the Cameron farm there were two hamamelis bottles, one in the bath-room, the other on a shelf in the kitchen. But nothing rewarded her search here. If only some one were at home! If only the telephone weren’t out of order! Desperately she took down the receiver, to be greeted by a faint, continuous buzzing. There was nothing for it; she must leave Johnny and run to a neighbor’s. But Johnny refused to be left. He
“It’s a shame, Johnny. I ought to know what to do, but I don’t. You come too, then.”
But Johnny refused to budge. He threw himself on his back on the veranda and beat the floor with his heels and wailed long heart-piercing wails that trembled into sobbing silence, only to begin all over with fresh vigor. Elliott was at her wits’ end. She didn’t dare go away and leave him; she was afraid he might kill himself crying. But mightn’t he do so if she stayed? He pushed her away when she tried to comfort him. There was only one thing that he wanted; he would have none of her, if she didn’t give it to him.
Never in her life had Elliott Cameron felt so insignificant, so helpless and futile, as she did at that minute. “Oh, you
“What’s the matter with him?” The question barked out, brusque and sharp, but never had a voice sounded more welcome in Elliott Cameron’s ears. She turned around in joyful relief to encounter a pair of gimlet-like black eyes in the face of an old woman. She was an ugly little old woman in a battered straw hat and a shabby old jacket, though the day was warm, and a faded print skirt that was draggled with mud at the hem. Her hair strayed untidily about her face and unfathomable scorn looked out of her snapping black eyes.
“It’s a—a bee sting,” stammered the girl, shrinking under the scorn.
“Hee-hee-hee!” The old woman’s laughter was cracked and high. “What kind of a lummux are you? Don’t know
She bent down and slapped up a handful of wet soil from the edge of the fern bed below the veranda. “Put that on him,” she said and went away giggling a girl’s shrill giggle and muttering between her giggles: “Don’t know what to do for a bee sting. Hee-hee!”
For a whole minute after the queer old woman had gone Elliott stood there, staring down at the spatter of mud on the steps, dismay and wrath in her heart. Then, because she didn’t know anything else to do and because Johnny’s screams had redoubled, she stooped, and with gingerly care picked up the lump of black mud and went over to the boy. Mud couldn’t hurt him, she thought, put on outside; it certainly couldn’t hurt him, but could it help?
She sat down on the floor and lifted the little swollen fist and held the cool mud
“It must have been Witless Sue,” said Aunt Jessica, late that afternoon, when Elliott told her the story. “She is a half-witted old soul who wanders about digging herbs in summer and lives on the town farm in winter. There’s no harm in her.”
“Half-witted!” said Elliott. “She knew more than I did.”
“You have not had the opportunity to learn.”
“That didn’t make it any better for Johnny. Laura knows all those things, doesn’t she? And Trudy, too?”
“I think they know what to do in the simpler emergencies of life.”
“I wish I did. I took a first-aid course, but it didn’t have stings in it, not as far as we’d gone when I came away. We were taught bandaging and using splints and things like that.”
“Very useful knowledge.”
“But Johnny got stung,” said Elliott, as though nothing mattered beyond that fact. “Do you think you could teach me things, now and then, Aunt Jessica? the things Laura and Trudy know?”
“Surely,” said Aunt Jessica, “and very gladly. There are things that you could teach Laura and Trudy, too. Don’t forget that entirely.”
“Could I? Useful things?” She asked the question with humility.
“Very useful things in certain kinds of emergency. What did Mrs. Gordon do for Johnny when she got home?”
“Oh, she washed his hand and soaked it in strong soda and water, baking-soda, and then she bound some soda right on, for good measure, she said.”
“There!” said Aunt Jessica. “Now you know two things to do for a bee sting.”
Elliott opened her eyes wide. “Why, so I do, don’t I? I truly do.”
“That’s the way people learn,” said Mother Jess, “by emergencies. It is the only way they are sure to remember. Laura is helping Henry milk. Suppose you make us some biscuit for supper, Elliott.”
Elliott started to say, “I’ve never made biscuit,” but shut her lips tight before the words slipped out.
“I will tell you the rule. You’d better double it for our family. Everything is plainly marked in the pantry. Perhaps the fire needs another stick before you begin.”
Carefully the girl selected a stick from the wood-box. “Just let me get my apron, Aunt Jessica,” she said.