"Do you know who he is?" I said to Helen, who was standing with me a little apart.
"No--how should I know? Except that he must be one of the minor canons."
"He is Mr. Leafchild"s rector."
"Is he?" she eagerly cried, the colour coming into her face. And just then he chanced to look our way, and nodded to me. I went up to him to speak.
"This is a terrible thing about Leafchild," he exclaimed in a minute or two.
"What is it?" I asked, my breath stopping.
Helen, who had slowly paced after me on the white flags, stood stock still and turned as pale as you please.
"Have you not heard of his illness? Perhaps not, though: it has been so sudden. A few days ago he was apparently as well as I am now. But it was only last night that the doctors began to apprehend danger."
"Is it fever?"
"Yes. A species of typhoid, I believe. Whether caught in his ministrations or not, I don"t know. Though I suppose it must have been.
He is lying at his lodgings in Paradise Row. Leafchild has not seemed in good condition lately," continued the clergyman. "He is most unremitting in his work, f.a.gs himself from morning till night, and lives anyhow: so perhaps he was not fortified to resist the attack of an enemy. He is very ill: and since last night he has been unconscious."
"He is _dangerously_ ill, did you say?" spoke poor Helen, biting her lips to hide their tremor.
"Almost more than dangerous: I fear there is little hope left," he answered, never of course suspecting who Helen was. "Good-afternoon."
She followed him with her eyes as he turned to the cloister-door: and then moved away towards the north entrance, looking as one dazed.
"Helen, where are you going?"
"To see him."
"Oh, but it won"t do. It won"t, indeed, Helen."
"_I am going to see him_," she answered, in her most wilful tone. "Don"t you hear that he is dying? I know he is; I feel it instinctively as a sure and certain fact. If you have a spark of goodness you"ll come with me, Johnny Ludlow. It"s all the same--whether you do or not."
I looked around for our party. They had disappeared up the other aisle under convoy of the bedesman, leaving Helen and myself to follow at our leisure; or perhaps not noticing our absence. Helen, marching away with quick steps, pa.s.sed out at the grand entrance.
"It is not _safe_ for you to go, Helen," I remonstrated, as we went round the graveyard and so up High Street. "You would catch the fever from him."
"_I_ shall catch no fever."
"He caught it."
"I wish you"d be quiet. Can"t you _see_ what I am suffering?"
The sweetest sight to me just then would have been Lady Whitney, or any one else holding authority over Helen. I seemed responsible for any ill that might ensue: and yet, what could I do?
"Helen, pray listen to a word of reason! See the position you put me in.
A fever is not a light thing to risk."
"I don"t believe that typhoid fever is catching. He did not say typhus."
"Of course it"s catching."
"Are you afraid of it?"
"I don"t know that I am afraid. But I should not run into it by choice.
And I"m sure you ought not to."
We were just then pa.s.sing that large druggist"s shop that the Squire always called Featherstonhaugh"s--just because Mr. Featherstonhaugh once kept it. Helen darted across the street and into it.
"A pound of camphor," said she, to the young man behind the right-hand counter.
"A pound of camphor!" he echoed. "Did you say _a pound_, ma"am?"
"Is it too much?" asked Helen. "I want some to put about me: I am going to see some one who is ill."
It ended in his giving her two ounces. As we left the shop she handed part of it to me, stowing the rest about herself. And whether it was thanks to the camphor, I don"t know, but neither of us took any harm.
"There. You can"t grumble now, Johnny Ludlow."
Paradise Row, as every one knows, is right at the other end of the town, past the Tything. We had nearly reached the house when a gentleman, who looked like a doctor, came out of it.
"I beg your pardon," said Helen, accosting him as he met us, and coughing to hide her agitation, "but we think--seeing you come out of the house--that you may be attending Mr. Leafchild. Is he better?"
The doctor looked at us both, and shook his head as he answered--
"Better in one sense of the word, in so far as that he is now conscious; worse in another. He is sinking fast."
A tremor shook Helen from head to foot. She turned away to hide it. I spoke.
"Do you mean--dying?"
"I fear so."
"Are his friends with him?"
"Not any of them. His father was sent to yesterday, but he has not yet come. We did not write before, not having antic.i.p.ated danger."
"Why don"t they have Henry Carden to him?" cried Helen in pa.s.sionate agitation as the doctor walked away. "_He_ could have cured him."
"No, no, Helen; don"t think that. Other men are just as clever as Henry Carden. They have only one treatment for fever."
A servant-girl answered the door, and asked us into the parlour. She took us for the relations from the north. Mr. Leafchild was lying in a room near--a comfortable bed-chamber. Three doctors were attending him, she said; but just now the nurse was alone with him. Would we like to go in? she added: we had been expected all day.
"Come with me, Johnny," whispered Helen.
He was lying in bed, white and still, his eyes wide open. The nurse, a stout old woman in light print gown and full white ap.r.o.n, stood at a round table in the corner, noiselessly washing a wine-gla.s.s. She turned her head, curtsied, and bustled out of the room.
But wasn"t he weak, as his poor thin hands clasped Helen"s! His voice was hollow as he tried to speak to her. The bitter tears, running down her checks, were dropping on to the bed-clothes.