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"What did you do with it?"
Ernest did not deign to reply.
"Bet you spent it for those grapes for Marian."
Ernest drummed on the window.
"She doesn't 'spect you to take your marble money for her, goosie. Say, Ernest, what's the matter?"
The boy swallowed painfully.
"Tell me, Ernest, I won't tell. Honest to goodness, I won't." Jane cuddled up close to him laying her face against his shoulder caressingly.
Ernest was not proof against her sympathy and he blurted out his remorse.
"'Tisn't your fault a speck--you didn't tease her to come."
Chicken Little patted and argued in vain. Ernest found her comforting, but did not feel that she was old enough to understand.
Chicken Little took the matter up with Marian the very next day. She began very diplomatically because she had promised not to tell.
"Do you s'pose you'd got sick if you hadn't come to see Ernest that day, Marian?"
"Probably not, dear."
This was not rea.s.suring.
"But you might have gone some place else, mightn't you?"
"I suppose so--only I don't think I should have been silly enough to go out in that storm without a good reason."
"But it wasn't Ernest's fault it stormed," Jane replied plaintively.
"Ernest's fault? Why, what do you mean?" Marian looked at the child in astonishment.
Jane's face was very sober.
"I just guess he couldn't help if it you got all cold and----"
"Of course not, Jane, what put such an idea into your head! I should have had more sense than to venture out in such a storm. Does Ernest--is that why he brings me all those things and hangs round so?--the poor boy? Dear me, this will never do."
"He wouldn't like it if he knew I told you," said Chicken Little ruefully.
"You haven't told me, dear. I guessed it, but I'll find a way to stop his worrying."
April came and went and Marian was still pale and weak. Dr. Morton looked grave and finally suggested to Frank that they should have the famous Dr. Brownleigh of Chicago down to examine Marian's lungs. Frank went white at the suggestion, but quietly acquiesced. Two days later the great doctor arrived.
Chicken Little knew there was some excitement afoot that morning when she went to school. Both Dr. and Mrs. Morton looked sad and Mrs. Morton sighed frequently. Ernest pushed most of his breakfast away untasted.
"What time will he be here, Father?"
"On the nine-thirty."
"Who?" Chicken Little demanded curiously.
"A man you have never seen, little daughter," her father replied quietly.
So Chicken Little went off to school mystified but curious.
The great physician did his work carefully. It was before the days of germ cultures, and the apparatus for such tests had not reached the perfection of today. There was much room for professional judgment.
Dr. Morton and Marian's mother were with Frank beside the bed. Frank looked miserably anxious in spite of his efforts at self control, and Marian's big eyes were questioning and wistful.
Dr. Brownleigh smiled cheerfully down at her as he finished.
"Don't be alarmed, Mrs. Morton, you will live to be a nice rosy-cheeked grandmother. I predict you'll be plumper than your mother."
The tension was broken and Marian sighed with relief.
"There, I told you it was silly to be scared about me, Frank. It always did take me a long time to recover from an illness--even a cold. I'm afraid I'm lazy--you didn't know you had married a lazy wife did you?"
Marian gave his hand a little loving pat and Frank silently stooped to kiss her, but he was not rea.s.sured.
He had watched the varying expressions of the great doctor's face and he was decidedly uneasy. With reason, he found when he accompanied his father and Dr. Brownleigh back to the old home.
Once inside the little sitting room Dr. Brownleigh turned to him gravely.
"Mr. Morton, your face tells me that you have read mine. Please don't make the mistake of imagining your wife is worse than she is. Her right lung is considerably affected, I am sorry to say. The left one seems to be perfectly sound there is no reason with proper care and a change of climate why she should not live for years."
"Change of climate?--that means what--a few months or a permanent move?"
"A year at the least--I should advise a permanent change to Kansas or Colorado or Arizona. She needs a dryer and more even climate, plenty of fresh air and an outdoor life."
Frank groaned. His father laid his hand on his shoulder sympathetically.
"It is hard, my boy, when you have such a good position here, too. Brace up--we'll find a way out--and Marian may be completely cured--remember that."
Many were the consultations in the Morton and Gates homes during the next few weeks. It was agreed not to tell Marian her weakness till she was able to be out again. In the meantime it was arranged that Dr.
Morton should take a trip west to look up a suitable location.
Without telling her the real reason, Frank had talked Marian into the idea of ranching and the older people found her eager zest and enthusiasm for the new life, pathetic.
"I know I'll be lots stronger on a farm," she declared. "I shall have chickens and make b.u.t.ter. You can all come out and spend the summers--won't that be grand?"
Dr. Morton had offered to buy a ranch for Frank taking over their cozy Centerville home in part payment. Ernest had been taken into the family councils and understood all this. He was a reserved serious lad who could be depended upon not to talk. But Chicken Little was not so favored. She knew only that Father was going on a long journey out west, and she did not concern herself as to his errand.
CHAPTER XIII