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"She has fainted, poor child!" she said, quietly, divining that the girl's insensibility was not serious. "Let us take her into the next room."
Leaving the woman to provide for Inez' necessities, and giving her instructions how to act, Helen turned from the improvised cot to go back to Jack. His hands were still warm, but she could find no perceptible pulsation. She loosened his collar and moved his head a little to one side, discovering the wound for the first time. A cry of pain burst from her as she drew back sick and dizzy, her lips quivering and tears starting to her eyes. Then she leaned over him again, gently was.h.i.+ng away the slight flow of blood with a moist cloth which one of the women handed her.
"Look!" she cried, pathetically, to Uncle Peabody, who entered the room a moment later, pointing to the wound and gazing into his eyes with her own distended by her suffering and her sense of helplessness.
Uncle Peabody put his arm about her, and rested his other hand upon Armstrong's wrist. "Dr. Montgomery will be here in a moment, Helen," he said, quietly, feeling instinctively that this was no time for words of sympathy. "I caught him at the Grand Hotel, and there was a motor-car at the door."
"He is dead!" was Helen's response, piteous in its intensity.
"Perhaps not, dear," replied Uncle Peabody, soothingly. "Let us stand by the window until the doctor comes."
Helen refused to suffer herself to be led away from her husband's side.
"I can't," she said, simply, shaking her head; "I must watch over him."
Then she turned back to resume her self-appointed vigil, and suddenly found herself looking into his open eyes.
"Jack!" she cried, seizing his face in her hands as she again sank upon her knees--"oh, Jack!"
She could find no other words in the revulsion which swept over her.
Her cry quickly brought Uncle Peabody, and the women drew near to behold the miracle of the dead brought to life; but all except Helen fell back as the doctor entered.
"He lives, doctor!" she exclaimed exultantly, her face radiant with joy.
"Then there is hope," he replied, with a rea.s.suring smile, as he began the examination of his patient.
Helen followed every motion as the doctor proceeded, encouraged by the confidential little nods he made at the conclusion of each process, as if answering in the affirmative certain questions which he put to himself. Armstrong again opened his eyes as the doctor carefully investigated the depth of the wound, and his lips moved slightly. Helen impulsively drew nearer, but the sound was barely articulate.
The doctor drew back the lids and peered intently into his open eyes, nodding again to himself. At length he turned to the silent group about him, who so eagerly waited for the verdict.
"Will he live?" was Helen's tense question as she seized his arm.
Dr. Montgomery looked into the upturned face with a kindly smile. "I hope so, Mrs. Armstrong," he answered, quietly. "It is a severe concussion of the brain, and we must await developments."
"Are there unfavorable signs?" asked Uncle Peabody, anxiously.
"No; quite the contrary so far. There is no fracture of the skull, and the normal size of the pupils shows no serious injury to the brain."
"The unconsciousness is due simply to the concussion?"
"Exactly."
"Then what do you fear?"
"There is always danger of meningitis. We can tell nothing about this until later."
"Will it be safe to move him?" asked Helen.
"Yes; and you had better do so. I must dress and sew up the wound, and then he can be carried home on a stretcher. Suppose you leave me alone with him now, while I make his head a bit more presentable."
Helen's buoyancy was contagious as she and Uncle Peabody started to leave the room, but Jack's voice recalled them.
"It is--the symbolism--of the period," he muttered, incoherently.
"It is all right," the doctor replied to Helen's startled, unspoken interrogation. "He is delirious, and will be so for days."
Satisfied with the explanation, they pa.s.sed through the door into the next room, where they found Inez sitting weakly in an arm-chair, her hair dishevelled, her face white as marble, supported by the woman in whose care she had been left.
Helen hurried to her. "He is not dead!" she cried, joyfully--"do you hear, Inez? Jack is alive, and the doctor thinks he will recover!"
Inez answered with a fresh flood of tears. "Oh, Helen! Helen!" she murmured, clinging impulsively to her arm.
Helen's recovery came much more spontaneously than did Inez'. With the one the pendulum had made a completed swing, and the depths at one extreme had been offset by the heights at the other. Inez, however, was hopelessly distraught by the acc.u.mulated weight of a mult.i.tude of emotions: the physical shock of the accident, the horror of the situation as it first burst upon her with unmitigated force, the involuntary tearing from her heart of the mask it had worn for so many months--and now the painful joy of the reaction. She rested in her chair, almost an inert ma.s.s, in total collapse of mind and body.
"I could not help it, Helen," she murmured, piteously, as her friend pushed back the dishevelled hair from her hot forehead.
"Of course you could not, dear," Helen cried, smiling through her tears of joy at the obvious relief her words gave. "Oh, I am so happy, Inez!"
Helen's face grew pale again as her thoughts returned to those first awful moments, which now seemed so long ago. "I really thought him dead, Inez," she continued, after a moment's silence. "We could not have endured that, could we, dear? Now we will take him to the villa and nurse him back to health and strength. How strange it will seem to him not to be able to do things for himself!"
"Is he--badly hurt?" ventured Inez.
"The doctor can't tell yet, but he feels encouraged."
"Is he--conscious?"
"Not wholly--and the doctor says he will be delirious for days."
"Oh," replied Inez, again relaxing.
Dr. Montgomery quietly entered the room, carefully closing the door after him. "All goes well," he replied to the questions before they were put to him. "The patient is resting quietly and may be moved as soon as a stretcher can be secured. Your villa is near by, I think Mr.
Cartwright said?"
"The stretcher is being prepared," replied Uncle Peabody, answering the doctor's question, "and I have sent for two strong men."
"Good. Have I another patient here?" Dr. Montgomery turned to Inez.
"She is suffering only from the shock," answered Helen.
"Let me take you both home in my motor-car," suggested the doctor.
"Take Miss Thayer," Helen replied, quickly.
"Oh no!" Inez shuddered; "I can never enter one of those awful things again!"
Dr. Montgomery smiled indulgently. "It will really be better, Miss Thayer, and I will personally guarantee your safe arrival."
"I would rather walk beside the stretcher," Helen continued; "there might be something I could do."