"Then just hold me. I"m tired," she answered wearily.
So he sat and held her on her pillows until her regular breathing told him that she was fast asleep, when, laying her back upon the bed, he left her with a heavy heart.
"I never dreamed that a child so young could take it so hard," he confided to his wife in troubled tones when he had told her the whole sad story. "She seems to have grown old in a night."
"Poor little birdie," Elizabeth tenderly murmured, stroking the dark hair from her sleeping son"s forehead as she laid him in his crib for his nap. "Why did they tell her so soon? The family themselves haven"t grown accustomed to the meaning of it yet."
"No one knows how she learned it, Elspeth. She was asleep under the trees when the President came home with the sad news. He had been to consult that famous specialist about the child"s condition when the surgeon told him that the case was hopeless, so far as her walking again is concerned. He was so unmanned by the verdict that he blurted it out to Mrs. Campbell immediately upon his return home, and the girls overheard it. But Peace was out-of-doors all the while. She didn"t waken for dinner; but when everyone was in bed, Mrs. Campbell heard her crying, and went to discover what was the matter. They are terribly broken up about the whole affair. It seems wicked to say so, but had the accident happened to any other of the sisters, it would not have seemed so dreadful. What is _Peace_ ever going to do without those nimble, dancing feet?"
"Our Peace will surprise us yet," prophesied the little wife hopefully.
"This experience won"t down her, hard as it seems now, if she is made of the stuff I think she is."
But as the days rolled by in that afflicted household, it really seemed as if they had lost their engaging, winsome little Peace for all time, so changed did the invalid grow. Nothing suited her, everything annoyed.
The girls talked too much or were too silent; the servants were too noisy or too obviously quiet; the President"s shoes clumped and his slippers squeaked; Mrs. Campbell always pulled the curtains too low or not low enough. The dogs" barking fretted her, the singing of the canary made her peevish, even the cat"s purring brought forth a protest; but as soon as the unreasonable patient discovered that all the pets had been banished on her account, she demanded them back. However, the long-suffering members of the family could not find it in their hearts to chide, and they redoubled their efforts to make their little favorite forget. Those were gloomy days in the Campbell household, for they sadly missed the merry laughter, the gay whistle, the unexpected pranks and frank speeches of this child of the sunshine and out-of-doors. At first they had tried to be cheerful and full of fun in the sick-room, hoping to win back the merry smile to the white lips; but Peace resented this att.i.tude, and straightway they ceased their songs and laughter, only to have her demand them again. Unhappy, capricious Peace!
"Why don"t you play on the piano any more?" she inquired of Faith one afternoon, when it was that sister"s turn to amuse the invalid for an hour or two.
"Do you want me to?" cried Faith eagerly, for her fingers were just itching to glide over the ivory keys.
"Of course,--s"posing you play something pretty."
So Faith took her place at her beloved instrument and dashed into a brilliant, rattling jig which had always been a favorite of the brown-haired sister.
But she had played scarcely a dozen measures when a shrill, imperious voice from above shrieked, "Don"t play that! O, stop, stop! Can"t you see it"s got _legs_?"
"Legs?" wondered Faith, her hands poised in mid air, so abruptly had she ceased her playing.
"There"s a million pair of legs to that tune and every one of "em can dance. Play something without legs."
The utter ridiculousness of the complaint did not occur to Faith, but with an unusual display of patience, she tried air after air, hoping to find something which might satisfy the childish whim of the lame sister, only to be rewarded at last by a peevish call, "You may as well give it up, Faith. They"ve _all_ got legs."
The entire family was at their wits" end. No one had a sane suggestion to offer, and their hosts of friends were in the same predicament. When it seemed as if something must surely give way under the strain, Peace suddenly subsided into a state of utter indifference to her surroundings, more alarming to her loved ones than had been her peevish, unreasonable demands. Nothing interested her, books she loathed, conversation bored her, neighborly calls from her dearest friends wearied her, she no longer yearned for the sunshine and flowers of the garden; indeed, she showed no desire to be out-of-doors at all, but lay day after day in the wheel-chair by the balcony window, staring with somber, unseeing eyes out over the river. Nothing family or friends could do roused her from her apathy, and despair descended upon the household. Must this little life which they loved so dearly fade away before their eyes, and they helpless to prevent?
"O, Donald," sobbed Mrs. Campbell, clinging desperately to her husband"s strong arm, "I cannot bear it, I cannot bear it! She takes it so hard!
It is torture to watch her suffer so. Our precious Peace!"
"If only her St. Elizabeth could come to her!" sighed the baffled President.
But it was not her beloved saint of the parsonage who saved the day. It was her Lilac Lady, now sleeping under the sod of the wind-kissed hillside, and Aunt Pen was her messenger.
It was a breathless, sultry afternoon in late summer when the sweet-faced matron of Oak Knoll turned in at the President"s gate and sought out the invalid lying motionless under the oak trees where the fierce heat had driven her. The little face among the pillows was no longer rosy and round; blue veins showed at the temples, the lips were colorless, the eyes hollow; the hands, once so brown and strong, were thin and waxy-white; the whole body lay inert,--lifeless, it seemed; and a pang of fear gripped the gentle heart brooding so tenderly over the poor wrecked life.
"Are you asleep, darling?" she whispered softly, touching with light fingers the cl.u.s.tering rings of dark brown which covered the shapely head.
The mournful eyes opened dully, and Peace murmured parrot fashion, "Good afternoon, Aunt Pen. I hope you keep well these hot days. You must take care of yourself, you know."
Secretly amazed, the woman merely stooped and kissed the white face, as she settled herself comfortably in a nearby chair and cheerily answered, "Yes, I am well, dear, and all the little birdlings are, too. I intended to bring Giuseppe and his violin this afternoon, but--"
"It"s just as well you didn"t," interrupted the other voice in lifeless tones. "Prob"ly _his_ music has legs, too, and I haven"t any use for such things these days."
"But he had promised to play for a dear old lady at the Home," continued Aunt Pen, as if she had not noticed the interruption. "So I brought you--"
"Some more magazines," again broke in Peace, perceiving the gay covers in the woman"s hand.
"That was very kind of you I"m sure, but I have a whole libr"y at my--at my _de_-mand. So you put yourself to a lot of trouble all for nothing."
"This is a different kind of magazine from any you have," replied the woman soberly, though sorely tempted to smile at the stilted, unnatural tones of her little favorite.
"Is it?" Just a spark of interest flickered in the somber eyes. "Why, I thought I had the whole c"lection already. Folks seem to think I don"t want to do anything but read, and they keep the house pretty well filled up with magazines, old and new. Last week I had Allee telephone to the Salvation Army to come and get them. But it didn"t do any good,--we"ve had as many more brought in since."
"This is the one your Lilac Lady was reading when she--fell asleep,"
said Aunt Pen gently, a little catch in her voice as she thought of Peace, doomed to spend the rest of her days in a wheel-chair, just as that other girl, the Lilac Lady, had done.
"Oh! And you brought it to me! I sh"d think you would want to keep it yourself."
"I did, dearie. I laid it away among my treasures, but today I chanced upon it, and in turning the pages, I caught a glimpse of a slip of paper written on, in her handwriting. I had not examined the book since the day I picked it up from the floor beside her chair; but this morning I drew out the sc.r.a.p she had written and found a little message for you--"
"For me?" Incredulous surprise animated the white face.
"Yes, dear. Some verses she had written that last hour,--not even complete. I know she intended them for you. Perhaps she felt that she would be--asleep--before you came, so she wrote a little message for you, Peace, but I never found it until today. Would you care to have me read it to you?"
"Let me read it, please." Peace s.n.a.t.c.hed the paper eagerly and with jealous eyes scanned the simple stanzas penned so many months ago for just that very moment.
"Up the garden pathway, Light as the morning air, Singing and laughing gayly, A child with face so fair Dances with arms outreaching, Her eyes ashine with glee, Nor pauses until she reaches The chair "neath the old oak tree, Where, chained by mortal weaknesses, I lie from day to day Waiting my darling"s coming.-- Ah! could I keep her alway!--
Child of flowers and sunshine, Child of laughter and love, Peace,--a G.o.d-given blessing, Straight from the heavens above, Bringing the breath of the woodland, The perfume of sun-kissed flowers, The freshness of vagrant breezes, The sweetness of cooling showers; Bringing the thrilling music Of skylarks and forest birds, Heart-healing, soul-cheering measures, Wondrous songs without words.
Peace,--oh, how can I tell it?-- The marvelous peace you have brought, The wonderful lessons of living Your generous spirit has taught, Easing the burden of sorrow, Soothing the sharp sting of pain, Bringing fresh aspirations,-- My Peace gives me _hope_ again!"
Once, twice, three times she read the lines. Then turning puzzled, wondering eyes upon Aunt Pen, she whispered eagerly, "What does it all mean, please? Did she really feel that way, Aunt Pen? Did I scatter sunshine after all? Was she happier when I was with her? O, did I--make her--forget?"
"More than you will ever know," answered the woman warmly, squeezing the thin fingers lying across her knee. "You brought back the sunshine she thought had gone out of her life forever. You gave her something to live for, something to do, made life seem worth while. O, my little Peace, it is just as the poem tells you,--you gave her _hope_!"
For a long time the child lay lost in thought, and only the faint rustling of the leaves overhead broke the stillness. Then she said sadly, glancing down at the useless feet in their gay slippers, "But I had my legs _then_."
"You have your smile now. A happy heart is worth more than a dozen pair of legs, dear. It was your merry voice, your gay laughter, your joyous nature that cheered your Lilac Lady. Surely you didn"t lose all those when you lost the use of your feet!"
Peace smiled ruefully. "You"d have thought so if you had lived with me since I got hurt," she confessed.
"I don"t believe it," Aunt Pen vigorously contradicted. "Our real Peace, our little sunbeam has just been hiding under a dark cloud all this while. She is coming back to us her own gay self some day,--soon, we hope."
"Do you b"lieve that?" Peace eagerly demanded.
"I know it," the woman answered with conviction.
"But s"posing I have really forgotten how to laugh and--and whistle, and be nice?"