"Yes," he said, "I see that she is asleep and quiet--too quiet. It is a foretaste of a longer sleep; some old people have it."
For the first time Joyce"s courage seemed to give way. When she had been alone she was brave enough, but now that her brother was there, woman-like, she seemed to turn to him with a sudden fear. They stood side by side near the bed; and the young doctor involuntarily watched them. Stephen had taken her hand in his with that silent sympathy which was so natural and so eloquent. He said nothing, this big, sun-tanned youth; he did not even glance down at his sister, who stood small, soft-eyed, and gentle at his side.
The doctor knew something of the history of the small family thus momentarily united, and he had always feared that if Stephen Leach did return it would only kill his mother. This, indeed, seemed to be the result about to follow.
Presently the doctor took his leave. He was a young man engaged in getting together a good practice, and in his own interest he had been forced to give up waiting for his patients to finish dying.
"I am glad you are here," he said to Stephen, who accompanied him to the door. "It would not do for your sister to be alone; this may go on for a couple of days."
It did not go on for a couple of days, but Mrs. Leach lived through that night in the same semi-comatose state. The two watchers sat in her room until supper-time, when they left their mother in charge of a hired nurse, whose services Joyce had been forced to seek.
After supper Stephen Leach seemed at last to find his tongue, and he talked in his quiet, almost gentle voice, such as some big men possess, not about himself or the past, but about Joyce and the future. In a deliberate business-like way, he proceeded to investigate the affairs of the dying woman and the prospects of her daughter; in a word, he a.s.serted his authority as a brother, and Joyce was relieved and happy to obey him.
It is not in times of gaiety that friendships are formed, but in sorrow or suspense. During that long evening this brother and sister suddenly became intimate, more so than months of prosperous intercourse could have made them. At ten o"clock Stephen quietly insisted that Joyce should go to bed while he lay down, all dressed, on the sofa in the dining-room.
"I shall sleep perfectly; it is not the first time I have slept in my clothes," he said simply.
They went upstairs together and told the nurse of this arrangement.
Joyce remained for some moments by the bedside watching her mother"s peaceful sleep, and when she turned she found that Stephen had quietly slipped away. Wondering vaguely whether he had intentionally solved her difficulty as to the fraternal good-night, she went to her own room.
The next morning Mrs. Leach was fully conscious, and appeared to be stronger; nevertheless, she knew that the end was near. She called her two children to her bedside, and, turning her blind eyes towards them, spoke in broken sentences.
"I am ready now--I am ready," she said. "Dears, I am going to your father--and... thank G.o.d, I can tell him that I have left you together.
I always knew Stephen would come back. I found it written everywhere in the Bible. Stephen--kiss me, dear!"
The man leant over the bed and kissed her.
"Ah!" she sighed, "how I wish I could see you--just once before I die.
Joyce!" she added, suddenly turning to her daughter, who stood at the other side of the bed, "tell me what he is like. But--I know .. I KNOW--I feel it. Listen! He is tall and spare, like his father. His hair is black, like--like his father"s--it was black before he went away. His eyes, I know, are dark--almost black. He is pale--like a Spaniard!"...
Joyce, looking across the bed with slow horror dawning in her face, looked into a pair of blue eyes beneath tawny hair, cut short as a soldier"s hair should be. She looked upon a man big, broad, fair--English from crown to toe--and the quiet command of his lips and eyes made her say--
"Yes, mother, yes."
For some moments there was silence. Joyce stood pale and breathless, wondering what this might mean. Then the dying woman spoke again.
"Kiss me," she said. "I... am going. Stephen first--my firstborn! And now, Joyce... and now kiss each other--across the bed! I want to hear it... I want... to tell... your... father."
With a last effort she raised her hands, seeking their heads. At first Joyce hesitated, then she leant forward, and the old woman"s chilled fingers pressed their lips together. That was the end.
Half an hour afterwards Joyce and this man stood facing each other in the little dining-room. He began his explanation at once.
"Stephen," he said, "was shot--out there--as a traitor. I could not tell her that! I did not mean to do this, but what else could I do?"
He paused, moved towards the door with that same strange hesitation which she had noticed on his arrival. At the door he turned, to justify himself.
"I still think," he said gravely, "that it was the best thing to do."
Joyce made no answer. The tears stood in her eyes. There was something very pathetic in the distress of this strong man, facing, as it were, an emergency of which he felt the delicacy to be beyond his cleverness to handle.
"Last night," he went on, "I made all the necessary arrangements for your future just as Stephen would have made them--as a brother might have done. I... he and I were brother officers in a very wild army. Your brother--was not a good man. None of us were." His hand was on the door.
"He asked me to come and tell you," he added. "I shall go back now...."
They stood thus: he watching her face with his honest soft blue eyes, she failing to meet his glance.
"May I come back again?" he asked suddenly.
She gave a little gasp, but made no answer.
"I will come back in six months," he announced quietly, and then he closed the door behind him.