Half an hour later, Mr. Opp dragged himself up the hill to his home. All the unfairness and injustice of the universe seemed pressing upon his heart. Every muscle in his body quivered in remembrance of what he had been through, and an iron band seemed tightening about his throat. His town had refused to believe his story! It had laughed in his face! With a sudden mad desire for sympathy and for love, he began calling Kippy. He stumbled across the porch, and, opening the door with his latch-key, stood peering into the gloom of the room. The draft from an open window blew a curtain toward him, a white spectral, “Kippy!” he called again, his voice sharp with anxiety. From one room to another he ran, searching in nooks and corners, peering under the beds and behind the doors, calling in a voice that was sometimes a command, but oftener a plea: “Kippy! Kippy!” At last he came back to the dining-room and lighted the lamp with shaking hands. On the hearth were the remains of a small bonfire, with papers scattered about. He dropped on his knees and seized a bit of charred cardboard. It was a corner of the hand-painted frame that had incased the picture of Guinevere Gusty! Near it lay loose sheets of paper, parts of that treasured package of letters she had written him from Coreyville. As Mr. Opp gazed helplessly about the room, his eyes fell upon something white pinned to the red table-cloth. He held it to the light. It was a portion of one of Mother says I can never marry you until Miss Kippy goes to the asylum. Mr. Opp got to his feet. “She’s read the letter,” he cried wildly; “she’s learned out about herself! Maybe she’s in the woods now, or down on the bank!” He rushed to the porch. “Kippy!” he shouted. “Don’t be afraid! Brother D.’s coming to get you! Don’t run away, Kippy! Wait for me! Wait!” and leaving the old house open to the night, he plunged into the darkness, beating through the woods and up and down the road, calling in vain for Kippy, who lay cowering in the bottom of a leaking skiff that was drifting down the river at the mercy of the current. Two days later, Mr. Opp sat in the office of the Coreyville Asylum for the Insane and heard the story of his sister’s wanderings. Her boat had evidently been “Considering all things,” he concluded, “it is much wiser for you not to see her. She came of her own accord, evidently felt the attack coming on, and wanted to be taken care of.” He was a large, smooth-faced man, with the conciliatory manner of one who regards all his fellow-men as patients in varying degrees of insanity. “But I’m in the regular habit of taking care of her,” protested Mr. Opp. “This is just a temporary excitement for the time being that won’t ever, probably, occur again. Why, she’s been “All wrong,” exclaimed the doctor; “mistaken kindness. She can never be any better, but she may be a great deal worse. Her mind should never be stimulated or excited in any way. Here, of course, we understand all these things and treat the patient accordingly.” “Then I must just go back to treating her like a child again?” asked Mr. Opp, “not endeavoring to improve her intellect, or help her grow up in any way?” The doctor laid a kindly hand on his shoulder. “You leave her to us,” he said. “The State provides this excellent institution for just such cases as hers. You do yourself and your family, if you have one, an injustice by keeping her at home. Let her stay here for six months or so, and you will see what a relief it will be.” Mr. Opp sat with his elbow on the desk and his head propped in his hand, After a long time he unknotted his fingers, and drew his handkerchief across his brow. In vain the doctor protested. Mr. Opp was determined. As the door to the long ward was being unlocked, he leaned for a moment dizzily against the wall. “You’d better let me give you a swallow of whisky,” suggested the doctor, who had noted his exhaustion. Mr. Opp raised his hand deprecatingly, with a touch of his old professional pride. “I don’t know as I’ve had occasion to mention,” he said, “that I am the editor and sole proprietor of ‘The Opp Eagle’; and that bird,” he added, with a forced smile, “is, as everybody knows, a complete teetotaler.” At the end of the crowded ward, with her face to the wall, was a slight, familiar figure. Mr. Opp started forward; then he turned fiercely upon the attendant. “Her hands are tied! Who dared to tie her up like that?” “It’s just a soft handkerchief,” In an instant Mr. Opp was on his knees beside her. “Kippy, Kippy darling, here’s brother D.; he’ll fix it for you! You want it parted on the side, don’t you, tied with a bow, and all the rest hanging down? Don’t cry so, Kippy. I’m here now; brother D.’ll take care of you.” She flung her loosened arms around him and clung to him in a passion of relief. Her sobs shook them both, and his face and neck were wet with her tears. As soon as they could get her sufficiently quiet, they took her into her little bedroom. “You let the lady get you ready,” urged Mr. Opp, still holding her hand, “and I’ll take you back home, and Aunt Tish will have a nice, hot supper all waiting for us.” An hour later, Mr. Opp and his charge sat on the river-bank and waited for the little launch that was to take them back to the Cove. A curious crowd had gathered at a short distance, for their story had gone the rounds. Mr. Opp sat under the fire of curious glances, gazing straight in front of him, and only his flushed face showed what he was suffering. Miss Kippy, in her strange clothes and with her pale hair flying about her shoulders, sat close by him, her hand in his. “D.,” she said once in a high, insistent voice, “when will I be grown up enough to marry Mr. Hinton?” She looked at him with the quick suspicion of the insane, but he was ready for her with a smile. “Oh, D.,” she cried, in a sudden rapture, “we are glad, ain’t we?” |