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"Then he still does breathe?" I asked, fiercely.
"Yes, a little-grain; but he don't know nothing, and of course there haint no possible chance, with his skull broke. I'm a-riding now to inform his maw's kin down Powderhorn."
I laid the whip to Mandy, who, startled, sprang forward in a gallop. The twenty minutes before I reached the Marrs home seemed endless. I believed I had already suffered all that a woman could; but that was before I knew the love of a mother for her child.
I ran into the house, pus.h.i.+ng away the people gathered there, and laid my hand on the bosom of the small body lying there so limp and still.
The heart was beating, feebly but steadily, "He is not dead!" I cried, "and he shall not die!"
Blant, sitting crouched by the bed, head in hands, raised up and stared at me; Mr. Marrs lifted a bandage from Nucky's head, showing a wound from which a piece of bone protruded, and shook his head hopelessly.
"But the bullet can't have gone in, or he would have died instantly," I said; "it must have broken the skull and glanced off, leaving the bone pressing against the brain."
"Even so, n.o.body can't live with their skull broke," he replied.
"But they can,--they do! A broken skull may be lifted, trephined, by a good surgeon,--many a life is saved thus nowadays."
"Haint no surgeons in this country," said Mr. Marrs; "what few scattering doctors there is don't follow carving."
"But the new telephone!" I cried. "There is a telephone now from our village to the railroad,--we can get word to a surgeon in the Blue Gra.s.s in a few hours; by hard riding he can be here inside of two days. If we can only keep the child alive until then, his life may be saved!"
Blant sprang to his feet, hope transfiguring his haggard face. "Tell me what to do," he said.
"Saddle your best nag for Philip, and let him ride to the school and tell the nurse to telephone for the best surgeon in the state, and that we shall bring Nucky to the hospital to-night on a stretcher."
Philip dashed off, and the rest of us went to work to make a stretcher, with two poles and plenty of warm blankets. I know little about these matters, but I believed that the child could be taken easily and safely across the mountains, by relays of men, and that if I could once get him to the trained nurse she would manage to keep life in him.
Then Blant fed us; and about two o'clock we set forth down Trigger, Blant, Rich and two others bearing the stretcher, and four more young men going along to relieve them every half-hour.
As we went slowly down Trigger, we saw a crowd gathered at Israel Cheever's home, too. "Dalt is bad wounded by the little chap's rifle,"
said one of "Uncle Billy's boys", "I wisht it had been Todd."
When the stretcher changed hands, we carefully examined Nucky for any change in pulse or temperature. There was none.
Nearly six hours the march lasted,--the way was rough, the snow and ice made the footing uncertain, the evening hours before the moon rose were dark. At last we made the last turn, and came in sight of the school and the village beyond. Rich Tarrant then laid a hand on Blant's arm.
"Right here is where you take a back track, Blant," he said, firmly; "it haint sensible for you to walk right spang into the teeth of the sheriff and the jail,--you can't afford to lose no time that way, your family not being able to do without you."
"That's so," said Blant, "I plumb forgot. Seems like I can't stand to leave the little chap, though."
"You got it to do. He'll be took good care of. You follow the ridges back."
Blant laid a large, tender hand on Nucky's head, and without a word, turned and struck straight up the nearest mountain, Rich watching till he was out of sight.
"That boy certainly sees more than his fill of trouble," he sighed; "I wisht I could help him more,--I would glad lay down my life for him."
"You proved that last winter," I said, remembering the bullet he took in his breast.
"Oh, that wa'n't nothing at all," he deprecated.
Sure enough, when we reached the hospital, there in the crowd of people who had heard of our coming and gathered to meet us, was the sheriff.
And now Nucky is safe in the nurse's care, his wounds properly dressed, and all means being used to keep life in him, the surgeon is on the way, and if he can live until to-morrow, he may be saved. I can only watch and pray.
XXI
SUSPENSE
_Wednesday Morning._
The best surgeon in the state arrived at noon yesterday, performed the trephining at once, and having done all that skill and science could, started back on his long horseback ride. Nucky continued in the deep sleep from which he might pa.s.s into either life or death. All afternoon, and into the night, we watched in vain for signs of returning consciousness. About ten, the door opened noiselessly, and Blant and Rich stepped in out of the night. Two hours later, Nucky's head began to move from side to side, and he moaned occasionally. A little past one, he suddenly opened his eyes and looked at Blant.
"They never got you, did they?" he asked, feebly.
"Who, son?"
"Todd and Dalt; they was fixing to layway you when I fired on them."
"Is that what made you disobey orders?" inquired Blant.
"Yes. The whole bunch of Cheevers come up to the fence, and started to throw down rails; and I was just about to drap down and fetch you the word, when I heared Todd tell the rest to make all the noise they could, so's to tole you out, and him and Dalt would hide in the trees and shoot you as you pa.s.sed. And then they clim the fence and made for the very spruce-pines where I was at. I knowed I couldn't get away then to warn you, so I done my best to shoot 'em."
Blant's face darkened, but his voice was gentleness itself as he said, "You done wise, son; and you certainly hit your mark, too,--they was carrying off Dalt when I got down."
Nucky sighed, deeply, happily, closing his eyes.
After a while he opened them again to say, "I allow they shot me up a little too, by these here rags on my head."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "'I allow they shot me up a little too by these here rags on my head.'"]
"Oh, a trifle, yes,--but none to hurt,--you wa'n't born to die by no Cheever lead."
"Gee, no," breathed Nucky, in quiet scorn.
"We brung you over here to the women, where you could get well sooner,"
continued Blant, in his gentle, rea.s.suring voice; "and now since you are doing so fine, I reckon I'll leave you a spell and get along home,--the babe is punier than usual."
"Yes, I don't want you to stay here and get arrested," said Nucky; "but I don't want you to go back there neither. You keep a constant watch on Todd,--I wish it was him I had shot."
Rich and I followed Blant out. Not until we stood out in the snow did we wring one another's hands in speechless relief.
"Of course he will live now," I said.
To-day Nucky is entirely rational, though quite weak. Only the nurse sees him. Killis, Taulbee, Keats, Hosea and Joab came in for news of him to-day, returning immediately on their long walks.