Dinner was announced with a decorous modulation befitting the circ.u.mstances.
Malcourt bore himself faultlessly during the trying function; Wayward was moody; his cynical glance through his gold-rimmed gla.s.ses resting now on Malcourt, now on Shiela. The latter ate nothing, which grieved Portlaw beyond measure, for the salad was ambrosial and the capon was truly Louis XI.
Later the men played Preference, having nothing else to do after the ladies left, Constance insisting on taking Shiela back to her own house, and Malcourt acquiescing in the best of taste.
The stars were out; a warm, sweet, dry wind had set in from the south-west.
"It was what we"ve prayed for," breathed Constance, pausing on the lawn.
"It was what the doctors wanted for him. How deliciously warm it is! Oh, I hope it will help him!"
"Is that _his_ cottage?" whispered Shiela.
"Yes.... His room is there where the windows are open.... They keep them open, you know.... Do you want to go in?"
"Oh, _may_ I see him!"
"No, dear.... Only I often sit in the corridor outside.... But perhaps you could not endure it--"
"Endure what?"
"To hear--to listen--to his--breathing--"
"Let me go with you!" she whispered, clasping her hands, "let me go with you, Miss Palliser. I will be very quiet, I will do whatever you tell me--only let me go with you!"
Miss Clay, just released from duty, met them at the door.
"There is nothing to say," she said; "of course every hour he holds out is an hour gained. The weather is more favourable. Miss Race will show you the chart."
As Shiela entered the house the ominous sounds from above struck her like a blow; she caught her breath and stood perfectly still, one hand pressing her breast.
"That is not as bad as it has been," whispered Constance, and noiselessly mounted the stairs.
Shiela crept after her and halted as though paralysed when the elder woman pointed at a door which hung just ajar. Inside the door stood a screen and a shaded electric jet. A woman"s shadow moved across the wall within.
Without the slightest noise Constance sank down on the hallway sofa; Shiela crept up close beside her, closer, when the dreadful sounds broke out again, trembling in every limb, pressing her head convulsively against the elder woman"s arm.
Young Dr. Lansdale came up-stairs an hour later, nodded to Constance, looked sharply at Shiela, then turned to the nurse who had forestalled him at the door. A glance akin to telepathy flashed between physician and nurse, and the doctor turned to Miss Palliser:
"Would you mind asking Miss Clay to come back?" he said quietly.
"Oh!--has she gone to bed?"
Shiela was on her feet: "I--I have brought a trained nurse," she said; "the very best--from Johns Hopkins--"
"I should be very glad to have her for a few moments," said the doctor, looking at the chart by the light of the hall lamp.
Shiela sped down the stairs like a ghost; the nurse re-entered the room; the doctor turned to follow, and halted short as a hand touched his arm.
"Dr. Lansdale?"
He nodded pleasantly.
"Does it do any good--when one is very, very ill--to see--"
The doctor made a motion with his head. "Who is that young girl?" he asked coolly.
"Mrs. Malcourt--"
"Oh! I thought it might have been this Shiela he is always talking about in his delirium--"
"It _is_," whispered Constance.
For a moment they looked one another in the eyes; then a delicate colour stole over the woman"s face.
"I"m afraid--I"m afraid that my boy is not making the fight he could make," she whispered.
"Why not?"
She was speechless.
"Why _not_!" ... And in a lower voice: "This corridor is a confessional. Miss Palliser--if that helps you any."
She said: "They were in love."
"Oh! Are they yet?"
"Yes."
"Oh! _She_ married the other man?"
"Yes."
"Oh!"
Young Lansdale wheeled abruptly and entered the sick-room. Shiela returned in a few minutes with her nurse, a quick-stepping, cool-eyed young woman in spotless uniform. A few minutes afterward the sounds indicated that oxygen was being used.
An hour later Miss Race came into the hallway and looked at Shiela.
"Mr. Hamil is conscious," she said. "Would you care to see him for a second?"
A dreadful fear smote her as she crouched there speechless.
"The danger of infection is slight," said the nurse--and knew at the same instant that she had misunderstood. "Did you think I meant he is dying?" she added gently as Shiela straightened up to her slender height.
"Is he better?" whispered Constance.
"He is conscious," said the nurse patiently. "He knows"--turning to Shiela--"that you are here. You must not speak to him; you may let him see you for a moment. Come!"
In the shadowy half-light of the room Shiela halted at a sign from the nurse; the doctor glanced up, nodding almost imperceptibly as the girl"s eyes fell upon the bed.