Aikenside - Page 29/166

What a cozy little chamber it was where Maddy lay, just such a room as

a girl like her might be supposed to occupy, and the bachelor doctor

felt like treading upon forbidden ground as he entered the room so

rife with girlish habits, from the fairy slippers hung on a peg, to

the fanciful little workbox made of cones and acorns. Maddy was

asleep, and sitting down beside her, he asked that the shawl which had

been pinned across the window might be removed so that he could see

her, and thus judge better of her condition. They took the shawl away,

and the sunlight came streaming in, disclosing to the doctor's view

the face never before seen distinctly, or thought about, if seen. It

was ghastly pale, save where the hot blood seemed bursting through the

cheeks, while the beautiful brown hair was brushed back from the brow

where the veins were swollen and full. The lips were slightly apart,

and the hot breath came in quick, panting gasps, while occasionally a

faint moan escaped them, and once the doctor heard, or thought he

heard, the sound of his own name. One little dimpled hand lay upon the

bedspread, but the doctor did not touch it. Ordinarily he would have

grasped it as readily as if it had been a piece of marble, but the

sight of Maddy, lying there so sick, and the fearing he had helped to

bring her where she was, awoke to life a curious state of feeling with

regard to her, making him almost as nervous as on the day when she

appeared before him as candidate No. 1.

"Feel her pulse, doctor; they are faster most than you can count,"

Grandma Markham whispered; and thus entreated, the doctor took the

soft hand in his own, its touch sending through his frame a thrill

such as the touch of no other hand had ever sent.

Somehow the act reassured him. All fear of Maddy vanished, leaving

behind only an intense desire to help, if possible, the young girl

whose fingers seemed to cling around his own as he felt for and found

the rapid pulse, "If she could awaken," he said, laying the hand softly down and

placing his other upon her forehead, where the great sweat drops lay.

And, after a time, Maddy did awaken, but in the eyes fixed, for a

moment, so intently on him, there was no look of recognition, and the

doctor was half glad that it was so. He did not wish her to associate

him with her late disastrous disappointment; he would rather she

should think of him as some one come to cure her, for cure her he

would, he said to himself, as he gazed into her childish face and

thought how sad it was for such as she to die. When first he entered

the cottage he had been struck with the extreme plainness of the

furniture, betokening that wealth had not there an abiding place, but

now he forgot everything except the sick girl, who grew more and more

restless, talking of him and the Latin verb which meant "to love," she

said, and which was not in the grammar.