With a startled gasp, Peace leaned forward in her chair, then sank back among the pillows with a dreadful, sickening sensation gripping at her heart. They were talking about her! She strained her ears to catch the President"s reply, but could hear only an indistinct rumble of voices mingled with Allee"s sharp sobs. So the angels had carried Sadie Wenzell to her home beyond the Gates! Idly she wondered when it had happened and why she had not been told. It had been one of her dearest plans to visit Sadie some day and see for herself how she enjoyed the sc.r.a.pbooks which had cost Peace so much labor and lament. Now Sadie was gone.
"Grandpa, Grandpa, why couldn"t _I_ have been the one to fall and hurt my back?" wailed the shrill voice from the open window. ""Twouldn"t have made so much difference then, but Peace!--O, Grandpa, I can"t _bear_ to think of her lying there all the long years--"
Again the voice trailed away into silence, and Peace lay stunned by the significance of the words. All her life chained to a chair! All her life a helpless invalid like the Lilac Lady! The black night of despair descended about her and swallowed her up.
They thought her asleep when they came to wheel her into the house before the dew should fall; and as she did not stir when they laid her in the white swan bed, they stole softly away and left her in the grip of the demon Despair.
So this was what the Lilac Lady had meant when she had said so bitterly, "You will turn your face to the wall, say good-bye to those who you thought were your friends, build a high fence around you and hide--_hide_ from the world and everything!" The words came back to her with a startling distinctness and a great sob rose in her throat.
"What is it, darling?" asked a gentle voice from the darkness, and Peace, clutching wildly for some human support in her hour of anguish, threw her arms about the figure kneeling at her bedside, and cried in terror, "O, Grandma, I _can"t_, I _can"t_!"
"Can"t what?" asked the sweet voice, thinking the child was a victim of some bad dream, for she never suspected that Peace could know the dreadful truth.
"I _can"t_ stay here all the rest of my life! I wasn"t made for the bed.
My feet _won"t_ keep still. I _must_ run and shout. O, Grandma, tell me it isn"t true!"
But the gentle voice was silent, and the woman"s tears mingling with those of the grief-stricken child told the story. Clasping the quivering little body more tightly in her arms, the silvery-haired grandmother sobbed without restraint until the child"s grief was spent, and from sheer exhaustion Peace fell asleep.
Then, loosing the grip of the slender hands, now grown so thin and white, she laid her burden back on the bed, and as she kissed the wet cheeks and left the weary slumberer to her troubled dreams, she whispered sadly, "Good-night, little Peace,--and good-bye. We have lost our merry little sprite. It will be a different Peace who wakens with the morrow."
CHAPTER V
THE LILAC LADY"S MESSAGE
Mercifully, Peace slept long the next morning, and it was not until the sun was high in the sky that she opened her eyes to her surroundings.
Then it was with a heavy sense of something wrong, and she stared uneasily about her, trying to remember what was the trouble.
"I feel as if I"d done something bad," she said half aloud, "but I can"t think of a thing."
The sound of Allee"s footsteps creeping softly along the hall and a glimpse of an awed, tear-stained face peering at her from the doorway suddenly recalled to her mind the scene of yesterday, and the bitter truth rushed over her with agonizing keenness. She could never walk again! All her days must be spent in a wheel-chair, a helpless prisoner!
The Lilac Lady was right,--she wanted to turn her face to the wall, to say good-bye to her friends and hide,--hide from the world and everything!
"Peace," whispered a timid voice from the doorway, where Allee had paused, uncertain whether to stay or to depart.
The invalid stiffened.
"Peace, are you awake?" persisted the pleading voice, for the brown eyes stared unblinkingly straight ahead of her, and not a muscle of her tense body moved. "May I come in and sit beside you?"
"No!" screamed Peace in sudden frenzy, almost paralyzing the little pet.i.tioner on the threshold. "_Go away!_ You can walk and run and jump, and I never can again. You"ve got two whole legs to amuse yourself with and mine are no good. Get out of here! I don"t want to see anyone with legs today--or tomorrow--or ever again!" Jerking the pillow slip over her eyes she sobbed convulsively, and Allee, with one terrified look at the quivering heap under the bed-clothes, rushed pellmell from the room, blinded by scalding tears.
Peace had sent her away! Peace did not want her,--would not have her any more! It was the greatest catastrophe of her short life to be banished by Peace; and stumbling with unseeing eyes down the hall, she ran headlong into the arms of someone just coming up the stairs.
"Why--" began a husky, rumbling voice, and Allee, thinking it was the President on his way to the sick-room, sobbed out, "O, Grandpa, she sent me away! She says she never wants to see a pair of good legs again. You better--"
"It"s not Grandpa, little one," interrupted the other voice. "It"s I,--St. John. Do you think she will let me in? Because I have come especially to see her."
But a sharp, imperative voice from the Flag Room answered them. "Come back, Allee, I"m sorry I don"t like the looks of legs today, but I want you just the same,--legs and all."
For an instant Allee looked unbelievingly up into Mr. Strong"s eyes, as if doubtful that she had heard aright; then as the minister gave her a gentle push toward the door, she bounded lightly away, and when the Hill Street pastor reached the threshold the two sisters were locked fast in each other"s arms.
All at once, through the tangle of Allee"s curls, the brown eyes spied the form of her beloved friend hesitating in the doorway; but instead of looking surprised at his presence, Peace pushed the little sister from her and demanded fiercely, as if his being there were the most natural thing in the world, "Make faces at me, St. John,--the very worst you know how."
"Why, my dear--" stammered the young minister, as much amazed at his reception as he could have been had she dashed a cup of water in his face. "Why, Peace, I don"t believe--"
"Of course you know how to make faces!" she interrupted scornfully. "Do you s"pose I"ve forgotten that day in Parker down by the barn? Make some now,--the most _hijious_ ones you can think of."
There was nothing to do but to comply with her strange whim; so, rumpling up his thick, shining black hair, he proceeded to distort his comely features into the most surprising contortions imaginable. But with the heavy ache in his heart and a growing lump in his throat at the pitifulness of her plight, he was not real successful in diverting her unhappy thoughts, and with a mournful wail of woe she burst into tears.
"My child!" he cried contritely, and in an instant his strong arms closed about the huddled figure, and he held her fast, crooning softly in her ear as a mother might over her babe, until at length the convulsive gasps eased, grew less frequent, and finally ceased.
There was a long-drawn, quivering sigh, a last gulp or two and Peace hiccoughed, "It"s no use, St. John. I can"t coax up a ghost of a smile from anywhere. I"ve _thunk_ of all the funniest things that ever happened to me or anyone else; I"ve scratched my brains to "member the funny stories I s"lected for Sadie Wenzell"s bunch of sc.r.a.pbooks; I"ve even pretended the funniest things I could imagine, but it won"t work. I knew if there was a sign of a laugh left inside of me, your horrible faces would bring it out. It did in Parker, when I thought I never could smile again. But this time--get your legs out of sight,--under the bed,--anywhere so"s I can"t see them. I don"t like their looks!"
Had the situation been less tragic, he could not have refrained from laughing at the ludicrous way she bristled up and snapped out her command; but mindful only of the great trouble which had suddenly overshadowed the young life, he hastily tucked his long limbs out of sight under the edge of the bed, slumped as far down in his chair as he possibly could, and fell to energetically stroking the brown curls tumbled about the hot, flushed face, as he vainly tried to think of some comforting words with which to soothe the rebellious, sorrowful child.
From below came the sound of a voice singing softly, and though the words were indistinguishable, the three occupants of the Flag Room caught s.n.a.t.c.hes of the tune Peace loved so well, the Gleaners" Motto Song. Recalling the days when the brown-eyed child had made the little Hill Street parsonage ring with this very melody, the preacher unconsciously began to chant,
""When the days are gloomy, Sing some happy song, Meet the world"s repining With a courage strong; Go with faith undaunted Through the ills of life, Scatter smiles and sunshine O"er its toil and strife.""
"Well, don"t it beat all?" exclaimed Peace wearily.
"Doesn"t what beat all?" mildly inquired the pastor, as she made no effort to explain her words.
"How some folks will wear a tune to a frazzle," was the disconcerting reply. "There"s Faith, now, she hasn"t played anything for days "xcept "_Carve-a-leery-rusty-canner_!" And when it ain"t that it"s "_Nose-arts Snorter_," or those wretched _archipelagoes_. I"m so sick of "em all that I could shout when she touches the piano. As for that song you were just droning,--why, everyone in this house seems to think it"s the only thing going. There is nothing left of it now but tatters."
The preacher had abruptly ceased his humming, and as Allee crept quietly from the room to hush the singer below, he suddenly remembered a commission given him by his wife; and fumbling in his pocket, he drew out a small book, daintily bound in white and gold. "Elspeth sent you this booklet, dear," he ventured, somewhat timidly, for after two such rebuffs as he had received in his endeavor to cheer the sufferer, he was at a loss to know what to say or do next. "She could not come today herself, but she thought this little story might please you."
"Thanks," replied Peace, dropping the volume on the pillow without a spark of interest in face or voice. "I"d rather have seen her. She has got some sense. Books haven"t. I"ve been stuffed so full of stories, I am ready to bu"st." Then, as if fearing that she had been rude to this dearest of friends, she added hastily, "But I s"pose there is room for one more. It must be good or Elspeth wouldn"t have sent it. What is it about?"
"It"s the story of a little girl named Gwen, who fell from--"
Peace stopped him with a peremptory wave of her hand. "That will do for the present," she said coldly, in such exact imitation of Miss Phelps that no one who had ever met the teacher could possibly mistake her tone. "I don"t like the name. It sounds like "grin"."
The minister rubbed his head in perplexity. Never in all his acquaintance with Peace had he seen her in such a mood. Was this child among the pillows really Peace, the sunbeam of this home, the sunbeam of every home she chanced to enter? Poor little girl! What a pity such a terrible misfortune should have befallen her! She stirred uneasily, and he hurriedly asked, "Would you rather I should go away and leave you alone?"
"No! O, no!" She clutched one big hand closer with both of hers, and a look of alarm leaped into her eyes, so heavy with weeping. "It"s easier--the pain here," laying one thin hand over her heart, "it"s easier with you here. I wish you had brought Elspeth."
"She will come some other day," he answered gently, glad to see a more natural expression creep over the white face, though his heart ached at the sorrowful tone of her voice. "What would you like to have me do?
Talk?"
"Yes, if you"ve anything int"resting to say," she murmured drowsily.
"And if not?" For he saw that it would be only a matter of minutes before she would be in the Land of Nod again.