The Pillars of the House

Chapter and half the town seemed to call, or send, at least once a day; and little boys used to hang about the court, too shy to come to the door, but waiting to collect tidings from the attendants, and mutually using strong measures upon one another when either was betrayed into noise.

She brought some drink; but as he tried to raise his head, the distressing sickness returned in full force, and in the midst the gasping cry, "My head, my head!"

"Some more ice, Clem," said Wilmet; but Clement looked up from the ice-pail in despair, for all was melted; and she could only steep handkerchiefs in the water and in eau-de-cologne, and lay them on the head, while Clement wondered if he could find a shop; but where was the use at three in the morning? and poor Lance rolled round wearily, sighing, "Oh, I did not know one"s head could ache so!"

Just then a step crossed the court, and a low voice said, "Is he awake? I have brought some more ice."

"O Jack, thank you!" faintly breathed Lance.

"Thank you!" fervently added Wilmet; "we did not know what to do for some more!"



"I thought you must want some by this time. I have a little ice- machine for Indian use," he added, as Clement looked at him like a sort of wizard.

He was small, sandy, and freckled after the Harewood fashion, and was besides dried up by Eastern suns, but one who brought such succour could not fail to be half celestial in the sister"s eyes; and as he said, "You are getting better," her response was fervent in its quietness, though poor Lance, conscious only of oppression and suffering, merely replied with a groan, and seemed to be dozing again into torpor in the relief the ice had given.

Clement and Captain Harewood besought Wilmet to rest--the latter declaring himself to be too much of an East Indian to sleep at dawn; and she consented to lie down in the little room, where she had enough of wakeful slumber to strengthen her for the heat of the day, when the fever ran high, and all the most trying symptoms returned.

The doctor continued to forbid despondency, building much on the lucid interval in the cool of the morning, and ascribing much of the excitement of brain to the excessive, almost despairing, study that Lance had been attempting in the last weeks before the examination.

There had, too, been a concert given by one of the great ladies of the Close, for which there had been a good deal of practice, hara.s.sed by certain amateur humours, and the constant repet.i.tion of one poor little shallow song in the delirious murmur greatly pained the Precentor, and made him indulge in murmurs that boded ill to the ladies" chances with the choir-boys. The sultry weather was likewise a great enemy, and could hardly be mitigated by the continual fanning kept up chiefly by poor Bill Harewood, who seemed to have no comfort except in working the fan till he was ready to drop, and his brother or Clement took it from him.

Mrs. Harewood was quite knocked up, and her daughters were curiously inefficient people. Their father came and went all day; but the serviceable person was the engineer, with his experience of sun- strokes, his devices for coolness, and his cheerful words, stilling the torrent of rambling restlessness, so that Wilmet depended upon him as much as on the doctor himself.

On Sat.u.r.day, the third day of the fever, which had rather increased than diminished, Wilmet begged Clement to go home for the night, to carry a report to the sisters, and fetch some things she wanted. He lingered, grieving and reluctant; while the heated atmosphere was like a solid weight on the sufferer, who lay, now and then murmuring some distressed phrase, as though labouring with some forgotten task; and Wilmet shunned touching the pulse again lest the reckoning should be higher than the last, and strove to construct a message conveying the hope that seemed to faint in the burthen of the day, insisting, above all, that guarded accounts should be sent to Felix, keeping carefully to Dr. Manby"s report.

"I can be here before nine," said Clement; "I wish I could help going. I feel as if something must happen!"

"A thunderstorm," said Captain Harewood in a reproving voice, as he plied the fan, with heat-drops on his brow; "a thunderstorm, which will prove the best doctor. Take care, you will miss the train."

Clement stooped to kiss the unconscious face, as though he had never prized his little brother before, and as some a.s.sociation of the touch of the lips awoke the murmur, "Mamma, Mamma!" he sped away with eyes full of tears.

Before he could have reached the station, the storm was coming--great rounded ma.s.ses of cloud, with silver-foamed edges and red lurid caverns, began to climb slowly up the sky, distant grumbles of thunder came gradually nearer, a few fitful gusts of wind came like sirocco, adding to the stifling heat, and were followed by exceeding stillness, broken by the first few big drops of rain, the visible flashes, and the nearer peals of thunder, till a sudden glare and boom overhead startled Lance into a frightened bewildered state, that so occupied Wilmet that she hardly heard the roaring, pattering hail- drops on the roofs and pavements; but when a sweet fresh wind blew away the hail, the weary head was more at rest, the slumber more tranquil, the breathing freer and softer than it had been since that Wednesday.

Some two hours later she saw him looking at her with a sort of perplexed smile and the first words upon his tongue were, "Is Bill first?"

"Nothing is settled till the Bishop comes home," Captain Harewood answered.

"What time is it?" then asked Lance.

"Half-past eight."

"It seems always half dark, said the boy, dreamily, "and yet there"s no curfew."

"They have been so kind as not to ring the bells," said Wilmet.

"Not ring the bells!" repeated Lance, in a feeble voice of amazement.

"No, nor play the organ," said Wilmet; "you have had to be so quiet, you know."

"No organ! and for me!" repeated Lance, impressed almost as if the "unchanging sun his daily course" had "refused to run;" but it rather frightened him, for he added, "Am I very ill, then?"

"Not now, I hope," said Wilmet, tenderly, and possessing herself of his wrist; "you are so much better to-night."

He looked wistfully into her face. "What"s the matter with me?" he said. "What does make my head go on in this dreadful way?"

"Dear Lance! It was that running in the hot sun."

"Oh!" (a sort of sigh of discovery) "I hope he had the verses."

"Yes, indeed you gave them."

"Then he must be first," said Lance; and then, as his thankful nurses were preparing to give him some nourishment, he spoke again. "Mettie, please come here;" and as she bent over him, "is this being very ill?--like dying, I mean."

"Not now, dearest," said Wilmet, kissing him. "You must be through with the worst, thank G.o.d."

He asked no more, for his voice was low and faint, the pain and dizziness still considerable; and the being fed without raising himself occupied him till the doctor came for his evening visit, and confirmed the sister"s comfort in his improvement. She sat gazing as he fell asleep again, till Captain Harewood reminded her that her letter to Ewmouth must be sent before the mail closed. She turned to the window, where still lay her anxiously-worded bulletin, not yet closed; but as she took the pen, the blinding tears fell thick and soft as the summer rain outside.

"This will be a happy ending," said John Harewood, as he saw her silently striving to clear her sight.

"Would you be so very kind as to write it for me?" she answered, pointing to the paper, with a lovely smile through her tears. "He will believe it all the more."

And as he took the pen, she retreated in quiet swiftness to her little room; but came back as he finished the few freshly hopeful lines; then going to the door with him, looked up with the same sweet tremulous smile. "Thank you! What thankfulness it is! What a merciful rain this is! If you knew the relief it is to send this report to Felix! You cannot guess what this dear little fellow is to him."

"I think I can, a little," said John Harewood, with his heart in his voice; and Wilmet smiled again, her stately but usually rather severe beauty wonderfully softened and sweetened by emotion.

The improvement continued when Clement arrived on the Sunday morning; and though fevered, confused, and beset by odd fancies, especially about the silence of the Cathedral, Lance knew his brother, smiled at him, and returned his greeting. Clement had a more cheerful task than usual in what seemed to be his day"s work--answering inquiries at the door, and taking in presents of fruit. All the Chapter and half the town seemed to call, or send, at least once a day; and little boys used to hang about the court, too shy to come to the door, but waiting to collect tidings from the attendants, and mutually using strong measures upon one another when either was betrayed into noise.

Clement called his sister aside to ask whether she could spare him, since she had the help of the matron and the Harewoods. "I should be very glad to stay," he averred, "but somebody is really wanted at home."

Wilmet had not been so much accustomed to consider Clement in the light of "somebody," as greatly to care whether he went or stayed, and only said, "I can get on very well. No one is of so much use as Captain Harewood."

"Just so," said Clement; "and I think I am doing more good at home.

Imagine my finding all the windows open in that pouring rain, and Cherry sitting shivering."

"Very foolish of Cherry," said Wilmet.

"Poor Cherry! she could not help herself, and was only thankful when I had the courage to shut them in Alda"s face. Then they don"t know what to do with Theodore."

"Poor Tedo--that"s the worst of it!"

"You see he is used to a man"s hand and voice. He is very good with me, but Sibby has had dreadful work with him every night till I came home. And, Wilmet, couldn"t you send a message who is to be mistress while you are away?"

"Alda, of course."

"Alda doesn"t seem to understand, and she will not let Cherry tell her."

"Cherry always does bother Alda. I can"t help it, Clem, they must rub on somehow and if you can make Theodore happy, the rest does not so much signify."

Not signify! Clement did not know whether he was standing on his head or his heels, and never guessed that not only was she too much absorbed in the present thoroughly to realise the absent, but that she would not venture to send orders based on his report, which in her secret soul she qualified by his love of importance and interference. However, he went away, and was not seen again all the ensuing week--the early part of which was very trying, for the fever recurred regularly about noon and midnight, and always brought rambling, which since that conversation with Wilmet, had taken the turn of talking about being buried in a surplice, and of continually recurring to the 134th Psalm, which, it was now remembered, Lance had shortly before taken part in, over the grave of an old lay-vicar, who, boy and man, had served the Cathedral for nearly sixty years.

Often, too, the poor little fellow seemed struggling with some sense of demerit--whether positive disgrace, or suspicion, or the general Christian feeling of unworthiness, Wilmet and John Harewood could never make out; and they did not choose to speak of these wanderings either to Will or to Mr. Beccles. In the intervals of consciousness, the thought of danger and death seemed to be lost in the weakness of exhaustion, and the dread of whatever brought back the pain, from which there was no respite except in cool air and perfect quiet. The least movement intensified it, and brought on the sickness that showed the brain to be still affected; and still worse was any endeavour to attend to the shortest and simplest devotions, when Mr.

Harewood attempted them. Yet all the time there was amendment; the fever was every day less severe, the intervals longer, the sleep calmer, the doctor more securely hopeful; and by the end of a week from the time of the accident, recovery was beginning sensibly to set in.

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