"What is it, Dexie? What has happened?"
"Dear mamma, come back into the room, and I will tell you. There has been an accident, and papa is hurt. Oh, mamma, do not scream so! No, he is not killed; do not say it. Oh, hush! let me open your message. Mine is from Mr.
Traverse, and he says papa is hurt and cannot be moved. Oh, mamma! do not scream so. You will terrify the children and make yourself ill."
"Oh, he is dead! My husband is killed!" she cried. "Why has this dreadful calamity come upon me?" and she wrung her hands and wept aloud.
"Oh, mamma, you _must_ stop! Listen: this is what your message says, and it is signed by a railroad official:
"There has been a collision, and your husband is injured. It is impossible to move him in his present condition, but everything possible shall be done for his comfort and relief.""
"Oh, mamma! let us go to him at once."
"Dexie, do you want to kill me? I could not survive the journey in the present state of my nerves; and does not the message say that everything shall be done for him? What could I do more?"
Another peal of the bell, and Dexie flew down to the door, where a bra.s.s-b.u.t.toned youth presented himself.
"I am sent to say that there is a train starting for the scene of the collision in fifteen minutes. If there is anyone here going down, they will have to hurry."
Dexie rushed back to her mother"s side.
"Oh, mamma, I must go to him! Can you go, too? Say quickly, mamma!"
"Oh, I shall die! I shall die!" and Mrs. Sherwood fell back on the sofa in violent hysterics.
This was answer enough, and Dexie rushed to her own room, calling loudly for Eliza.
Gussie ran up the stairs at that moment, saying wildly: "Oh, Dexie, is it true? Is papa hurt?"
"Yes, Gussie, and I am going to him. Run to mamma; I cannot delay a moment.
Here, Eliza," as the frightened domestic appeared, "put those things into this travelling-bag while I tell you what you are to do. Papa is hurt, and I have barely time to catch the train. You must run for Mrs. Jarvis as soon as I am done with you, and tell her to come and stay with mamma; then hurry along for the doctor--he will give mamma something to quiet her. Tell Mrs.
Jarvis I leave everything in her care till I return, and say that she must fix up the back parlor all ready for papa, in case he can be brought home.
She will know what to do. Now, I must go. I am sure I can trust you to do your best, Eliza, till I get back. I do not know when that will be."
She arrived at the depot hot and breathless, but in time to take her place among the number who, with white, sad faces and tear-dimmed eyes, were on their way to claim the forms of loved ones, or to comfort and relieve those whose lives had been spared them. The first tears she shed were those that fell when she recognized Edith Wolcott and her brother among the pa.s.sengers.
"Dexie, you here, and alone!" was Edith"s greeting, and the answer was a flood of relief-giving tears.
"Papa is hurt," she sobbed, as Edith inquired why she was on the train.
"I am so sorry; but perhaps it is not as bad as you fear. We expected Aunt Eunice would arrive by that train. We do not know that she really was a pa.s.senger, but I could not rest at home till I knew the truth!" Edith exclaimed. "Mr. Traverse was to have returned to-day," she added. "Did you hear if he was hurt?"
Dexie did not know, but thought not, as he had sent her the message concerning her father.
They relapsed into silence, except when someone would voice the sentiments in the heart of each and say, with a sigh, "How slowly the train moves along!" Yet they were travelling very rapidly, and in due time they arrived at the scene of the wreck.
Such a spectacle Dexie had never seen. Cars were piled upon one another in a confused ma.s.s, and she wondered how anyone had escaped alive from the broken timbers that had formed the cars.
She seemed to know instinctively which way to turn in search of her father, but she had only made a few steps when she met Mr. Traverse looking for her.
"Do not be alarmed, Miss Dexie; I am not so bad as I look," he said, rea.s.suringly, as Dexie started at the sight of his bandaged head and splintered arm. "I have an ugly scalp wound, and that makes the bandages necessary, and my broken arm is nothing. Now, be brave," he said, as they stopped before the door of the house where her father had been taken. "He has been suffering great pain and looks badly, and he will not be able to see you unless you are calm. The doctor is with him now. I will go and see if you can come in."
"Do not keep me waiting, Mr. Traverse. I will be quiet. Indeed, you can trust me," and she lifted a white face, full of entreaty, to his gaze.
"My brave little girl!" was Guy"s inward comment. "It is just as well that she came alone, for no one else in the family has self-control enough to bear this."
In a few minutes Guy returned and conducted her to her father"s side, and she bent over him and kissed his white face tenderly.
"Dear papa, I have come to stay with you. What can I do to help you?" and she laid her hand in his. "Mamma feels too badly to come just now, dear papa."
The quiet manner in which she removed her hat and cloak and then returned to the bedside to await the doctor"s orders impressed the latter favorably, and with a few words of instruction to Mr. Traverse he departed to see his other waiting charges.
They were sad and anxious days that followed, for it was feared that Mr.
Sherwood might not, after all, survive the shock; but Dexie never lost heart, and was rewarded, after many days, by hearing the welcome news that her father could safely be moved to his home.
Traverse had proved himself a helpful and faithful friend, and more than one broken-hearted person blessed him for his ready help and sympathy, for the accident had been attended with much loss of life and had spread mourning into many homes.
Dexie had written twice daily to her mother; but having once mentioned the fact that the few houses in the vicinity of the accident were filled with maimed and wounded who were too ill to be sent to their homes, Mrs.
Sherwood considered it impossible for her to witness the sight, and Dexie advised her to stay at home. She was well aware that the distressing sights and sounds which were to be witnessed hourly in every house would have such an effect on her mother that her presence would be more hurtful than beneficial to her father in his present condition.
Dexie was very anxious to know if everything was in readiness for her father"s arrival, and Mr. Traverse relieved her anxiety by offering to go to the house with the family doctor and make everything sure, and then return and accompany them home.
It was with a feeling of shame that she gave her last message to him as he was about to leave her.
"Will you be kind enough to tell Dr. Brown how necessary it will be for papa to come home to a quiet house; and if mamma is not able to bear the sight of his arrival, will he see that she is not at home just at the time?
He will understand and can manage it, I am sure."
Traverse looked at her in surprise.
"Mamma is apt to be hysterical, and papa will be too tired with the journey to bear any unusual excitement. I dread the time of his arrival at the house more than I do the rest of the journey; but it must be managed quietly, somehow. It would take so little to set him back when he is so weak."
"It shall be managed quietly, Miss Dexie, so do not be anxious; I will see that your father has every chance," and he turned away, wondering at the care and tact that could see and overrule the want of thought in others, when age and experience should have given others the self-control that was so wonderful to see in a girl of her years.
Mr. Sherwood bore the journey much better than they expected, and they carried him to the room which, by Dexie"s forethought, had been provided with everything that could add to his comfort. The house was quiet and still, and a good hour"s rest fortified him for the visit that his wife must soon make to his room.
Mrs. Sherwood had been persuaded into taking a drive with the doctor"s wife about the time the train was expected, and she had been kept away long enough for Mr. Sherwood to rally from the fatigue of the journey. Gussie, with the rest of the family, had witnessed his arrival from an upper window, and wept sorely at seeing her father carried into the house on a bed, remembering how well and strong he had walked out of it a few short weeks before.
When Mrs. Sherwood arrived, and found that her husband had been brought home in her absence, she felt very much hurt, and she entered the room subdued and quiet; but when she beheld the change that had taken place in her strong, robust husband since she had last seen him, nothing but the doctor"s presence prevented her from throwing herself across the bed. She dropped to her knees by the bedside, with a wail of despair, and Gussie"s sobs were added to the moans that came from the lips of the kneeling wife.
Dexie bent over her sister, saying firmly:
"You must either control yourself or leave the room. Can"t you see how it distresses papa?"
Guy Traverse led the sobbing girl out of the room at last, and his kind words of comfort did much to help Gussie overcome her violent grief. He was fast recovering from his own wounds, and he made himself very useful in spite of his one-armed condition--for he still wore his broken arm in a sling. Dexie was not blind to the excellent traits of character he had displayed during the trying weeks past, but when she endeavored to express her thanks he stopped her with a word.
Weeks pa.s.sed, and Mr. Sherwood"s progress was so slow as to damp all hopes as to his ultimate recovery.
"I must know the truth," he said one morning, when the doctor made his usual visit; "it is no kindness to keep me in ignorance of my true condition. If I am not likely to rise from this bed a well man, then it is time I settled my business; so tell me what you think, Dr. Brown."
But it is not easy to get a doctor"s opinion, and at last it was decided to send for the famous Dr. Jacobs, and have a consultation.