The Big Horn flowed by a tortuous and rapid course through rough
country into the Goat. The trail was bad and, in places, led over
high mountain shoulders in a way heartbreaking to packers. For
this reason, all who knew the ways and moods of a canoe chose the
water in going up the canyon. True enough, there were a number of
lift-outs and two rather long portages that made the going up
pretty stiff, but if a man had skill with the paddle and knew the
water he might avoid these by running the rapids. Men from the
Ottawa or from some other north Canadian river, like all true
canoemen, hated to portage and loved to take the risk of the
rapids. Though the current was fairly rapid, going upstream was
not so difficult as one might imagine; that is, if the canoeman
happened to know how to take advantage of the eddies, how to sneak
up the quiet water by the banks, how to put the nose of his canoe
into the swift water and to hold her so that, as Duprez, the keeper
of the stopping place at the Landing, said, "She would walk on de
rapide toute suite lak one oiseau."
There was a bad outbreak of typhoid at the upper camp on the Big
Horn, and Dr. Bailey had been urgently summoned. The upper camp
lay on the other side of the Big Horn Lake, twenty miles or more
from the steel. The lake itself was six miles long by canoe, but
by trail it was at least twice that. Hence, though there would be
some stiff paddling in the trip, the doctor did not hesitate in his
choice of route. He knew his canoe and loved every rib and thwart
in her. He had learned also the woodsman's trick of going light.
A blanket, a tea pail which held his grub, consisting of some
Hudson Bay hard tack, a hunk of bacon, and a little tea and sugar,
and his drinking cup constituted his baggage, so that he could make
the portages in a single carry. Many a mile had he gone, thus
equipped, both by trail and by canoe, in his journeyings up and
down these valleys, doing his work for the sick and wounded in the
railroad, lumber, and tie camps, and more recently in the new-
planted mining towns.
It was a great day for his trip. A stiff breeze upstream would
help him in his fight with the current and coming down it would be
glorious. The sun was just appearing over the row of pines that
topped the low mountain range to the east when he packed his kit
and blankets under the gunwale in the bow and slipped his canoe
into the water. He was about to step in when a voice he had not
heard for many days arrested him.
"Hello, Duprez! Did you see the preacher pass this way yesterday?
He was-- By the livin' jumpin' Jemima! Barney!"
It was Ben Fallows, gazing with open mouth on the doctor. With two
swift steps the doctor was at his side. He grasped Ben by the arm
and walked him swiftly apart.
"Ben," he said, in a low, stern voice, "not a word. I once did you
a good turn?"
"Oui. He's not want nobody. Non. He's good man on de canoe."
It was an awkward situation. There was a very good chance that he
should fall in with his brother somewhere on the trip, and that, at
all costs, he was determined to avoid. For a minute or more he sat
holding his canoe, calculating time and distances. At length he
came to a resolve. He must visit the camp on the Big Horn, and he
trusted his own ingenuity to avoid the meeting he dreaded.
"Bo' jou' an' bon voyage. Gare a vous on de Longue Rapide. You
mak' de portage hon dat rapide, n'est ce pas?"
"No, sir. No portage for me, Duprez. I'll run her."
"Prenez garde, M'sieu le Docteur," answered Duprez, shrugging his
shoulders. "Maudit! Dat's ver' fas' water!"
"Don't worry about me," cried the doctor. "Just watch me take this
little riffle."
"Bien!" cried Duprez, as the doctor slipped his canoe into the eddy
and, with a smooth, noiseless stroke, sent her up toward the point
where the stream broke into a riffle at the head of the rapid which
led to the falls below. It may be that the doctor was putting a
little extra weight on his paddle or that he did not exercise that
unsleeping vigilance which the successful handling of the canoe
demands, but whatever the cause, when the swift water struck the
canoe, in spite of all his strength and skill, he soon found
himself almost in midstream and going down the rapids.
"Mon Dieu!" cried Duprez, dancing in his excitement from one foot
to the other. "A droit! a droit! Non! Don' try for go hup! Come
out on de heddy!"
The doctor did not hear him, but, realizing the hopelessness of the
frontal attack upon the rapid, he steered his canoe toward the eddy
and gradually edged her into the quiet water.
"You come ver' close on de fall, mon gar'!" cried Duprez, as the
doctor paddled slowly up the edge past him. "You bes' pass on de
portage. Not many mans go hup on de rapids comme ca."
"All right, Duprez. I hit her too hard, that's all."
Once more the doctor moved toward the riffle. He had done the
thing before and he was not to be beaten now. As the eddy bore him
toward the swift water again he carefully gauged the angle of
attack, so that when the nose of the canoe entered the riffle, with
the trick that all canoemen know, he held her up firm against the
water, and, with no very great effort, but by skilful manipulations
of the force of the current, he shoved her gradually across the
riffle into the slow water near the farther bank, and with a
triumphant wave of the paddle disappeared around the bend.
"He's good man," said Duprez to Ben Fallows, who had taken all this
time to recover from the shock of Barney's sudden appearance. "But
de preechere, he's go hup dat rapide lak one oiseau las' night."
"Did, eh?" answered Ben. "Well, he didn't put in three summers on
the Mattawa fer nothin'. He's a bird in the canoe, an' so's his
bro--that is--the doctor there. Wonder if he'll catch him!" Ben
was much excited.
Meanwhile the doctor paddled on with steady, swinging stroke,
taking advantage of every eddy and cross current, stealing along
the bank under the overhanging trees, sidling across swift water,
lifting his canoe over rocky bits, till near mid-day he found
himself at the portage below the Long Rapid.
"Guess I'll camp on the other side," he said, talking aloud after
the manner of men who live much alone. He adjusted his paddles on
the thwarts, hooked his tea pail to his belt, shouldered his canoe,
and, taking his blanket pack in his hand, made the half mile
portage without a "set down."
"There," he said, setting his canoe carefully on the grass, "my
legs are better than my arms. Now we'll grub." He unpacked his
tea pail, cut his bacon into strips preparatory to toasting, built
a fire, drew a pail of water, threw in a handful of tea, swung it
by a poplar sapling over the fire, and sat down to toast his bacon.
In fifteen minutes his meal was ready--such a meal as can be had
only in the mountains under the open sky and at the end of a ten-
mile paddle against the stream of the Big Horn. After dinner he
lit his pipe and stretched himself in the warm spring sun for half
an hour's quiet think. The old restlessness was coming back upon
him. His work as Medical Superintendent of the railway construction
was practically completed. The medical department was thoroughly
organized and the fight with disease and dirt was pretty much over
so far as he was concerned. And with the easing of the strain there
came fiercely upon him the soul fever that had for the last three
years driven him from land to land. Had it not been that his
professional honour demanded that he should hold his post and do his
work, he had long ago left a district where he was kept constantly
in mind of what he had so resolutely striven to forget. By the
exercise of the most assiduous care he had prevented a meeting with
his brother during the last three months. But in this he could not
hope to be successful much longer. Before his second pipe was
smoked he had reached his resolve. "I'll pull out of this," he
said, "once this Big Horn camp is cleaned up."
He packed his kit, carefully extinguished his fire, the mark of a
right woodsman, slipped his canoe into the water, and set off
again. His meeting with Ben Fallows seemed somehow to have brought
his brother near him to-day. Everything was eloquent of those days
they had spent together on the upper reaches of the Ottawa. The
flowing river, the open sky, the wood, the fresh air, and, most of
all, the slipping canoe spoke to him of Dick. The fierce
resentment, the bitter sense of loss, that had been as a festering
in his heart these years, seemed somehow to-day to have lost their
stinging pain. With every lift of the paddle, with every deep
breath of the fragrant spring air, with every slip of the canoe,
the buoyant gladness of those old canoeing days came swelling into
his heart, and ere he knew he caught himself singing, to the
rhythmic swing of paddle and shoulders, the old Habitant canoe
song:
"En roulant ma boule roulant."
As often as he found his body swinging to the song, so often did he
sternly check himself and resolutely set another air going in his
head, only to find himself in a short space swinging along again to
the old song to which he and his brother had so often made their
canoe slip in those great days that now seemed so far away.
"En roulant ma boule,"
sang his paddle in spite of all he could do. He could hear Dick's
clear tenor from the bow. "Here, confound it! Quit it, I say!" he
said aloud savagely.
"En roulant ma boule roulant,"
in a clear strong voice came the old song from around the bend.
The doctor almost dropped his paddle into the stream.
"Heavens above!" he muttered. "What's that? Who's that?"
"Visa la noir, tua le blanc,
Rouli roulant, ma boule roulant,"
sang the voice. There was only one who could sing that verse just
that way. With two swift heaves of the paddle he lifted his canoe
into the overhanging bushes, noiselessly leaped ashore, and pulled
his canoe up the bank after him. Down the river still came the
song, and ever nearer.
"O fils du roi tu es mechant,
En roulant ma boule."
The doctor cautiously parted the bushes and looked out. Close to
the bank came the canoe, the singer sitting in the stern, his hat
off and his face showing brown against the fair hair. How strong
he looked and how handsome! Barney remembered his own boyish pride
in his brother's good looks. Yes, he was handsome as ever, and yet
he was different. "He's older, that's it," said the man in the
bushes, breathing hard. No, it was not that altogether. There was
a new gravity, a new dignity, upon the face. All at once the song
ceased abruptly. The paddle was laid down and the canoe allowed to
drift. The current carried her still nearer the shore. Every line
in the face could now be seen. The man peering out through the
bushes was conscious of a sharp thrust of pain. The lines in that
grave, handsome face were lines drawn with some sharp instrument of
grief. The change was not that of years, it was more. Not simply
the gravity of responsible manhood, it was that, and something
else. This was the change, the old careless gaiety was gone out of
the face and in its place sadness, almost gloom. Straight down the
river the grave, sad face was turned, but the eyes were fixed with
unseeing gaze upon the flowing water. The canoe was now almost
abreast the hiding place in the bushes and still drifting.
Suddenly the man in the canoe, lifting up his face toward the sky,
cried out, "I'll bring her back, please God, and I'll find him,
too!" The watcher drew back quickly. A stick snapped under his
hand. He threw himself face down and gripped his hands hard into
the moss as if to hold himself there. "A deer, I guess, but I must
get on," he heard a voice say, then a flip of the paddle and,
looking out through the bushes, he saw the swaying figure of the
man he most longed and most dreaded to see of all men in the world
fast disappearing from his view. Twice he raised his hands to his
lips to call after him, but even as he did so a vision held his
voice, the vision of a room in a city far away, the girl he loved,
and this man pressing hot kisses on her face.
"No," he said at length, grinding his foot hard into the moss, "let
him go." But still with straining eyes he gazed after the swaying
figure till the bend in the river hid it from his sight. Then he
sank down on the deep moss bank with the air of a man who has just
passed through a heavy fight.
The rest of the journey upstream was to him a weary drag. The
brightness had gone out of the light, the sweetness out of the air.
A burning pain filled his heart and clutched at his throat. The
old sore, which his work for the sick and wounded had helped to
heal over, had been torn open afresh, and the first agony of it was
upon him again. He arrived at the upper camp late at night and
weary. But, weary as he was, he toiled on in his fight with the
typhoid outbreak till near the dawning of the day, then, snatching
an hour's sleep, he set off down the Big Horn, resolved that ere a
week had passed he would seek in some far land the forgetting which
here was impossible to him.
Steadily the paddle swung all the long morning, but without
awakening any rhythmic song in his heart. It was a heavy grind to
be got through with as soon as might be. Even the slip and leap of
the canoe failed to quicken his heart a single beat. It was still
early in the forenoon when he reached the Long Rapid. It was a
dangerous bit of water, but without a moment's considering he stood
upright in his canoe and, casting a quick glance down the boiling
slope, he made his choice of passage. Then getting on his knees he
braced them firmly against the sides of his canoe and before he was
well ready found himself in the smooth, steep pitch at the crest of
that seething incline of plunging water. Two long swallowlike
swoops, then a mad plunging through a succession of buffeting,
curling waves that slapped viciously at him as he dashed through, a
great heave or two over the humping billows at the foot, then the
swirl of the eddy caught him, and lifted him clear over into the
quiet water. One minute of wild thrills and the Long Rapid was
left behind.
"Didn't take that quite right," he grumbled. "Ought to have lifted
her sooner. Next time I'll get through dry. Next time?" he
repeated. "God knows if there'll ever be any next time of that
water for me." He paddled round the eddy toward the shore,
intending to dump the water out of his canoe. "Hello! What in
thunder is that?" Up against the driftwood, where it had been
carried by the eddy, a canoe was floating bottom upwards. "God
help us!" he groaned. "It's his canoe! My God! My God! Dick,
boy, you're not lost! He'd run these rapids. That's his style.
Oh, why didn't I call him? We could have done it together safe
enough!" He stood up in his canoe and searched eagerly among the
driftwood. "Dick! Dick!" he called over and over again in the
wild cry of a wounded man. He paddled over to the canoe and
examined it. "Ah, that's where he hit the rocks, just at the foot.
But he shouldn't drown here," he continued, "unless they hit him.
Let's see, where would that eddy take him?" For another anxious
minute he stood observing the run of the water. "If he could keep
up three minutes," he said, "he ought to strike that bar." With a
few sweeps of his paddle he was on the sand bar. "Ha!" he cried.
A paddle lay on the sand just above the water mark. "That never
floated there." He leaped out and drew up his canoe, then,
dropping on his knees, he examined the marks upon the bar. There
on the sand was stamped the print of an open hand. "Now, God be
thanked!" he cried, lifting his hands toward the sky, "he's reached
this spot. He's somewhere on shore here." Like a dog on scent he
followed up the marks to the edge of the forest where the bank rose
steeply over rough rocks. Eagerly he clambered up, his eyes on the
alert for any sign. He reached the top. A quick glance he threw
around him, then with a low cry he rushed forward. There,
stretched prone on the moss, a little pile of brushwood near him,
with his match case in his hand, lay his brother. "Oh, Dick, boy!"
he cried aloud, "not too late, surely!" He dropped beside the
still form, turned him gently over and laid his hand upon his
heart. "Too late! Too late!" he groaned. Like a madman he rushed
out of the woods, flung himself down the rocky bank and toward his
canoe, seized his bag and scrambled back again. Again, and more
carefully, he felt for the heartbeat. He thought he could detect a
feeble flutter. Hurriedly he seized his flask and, forcing open
the closed teeth, poured a few drops of the whiskey down the
throat. But there was no attempt to swallow. "We'll try it this
way." With swift fingers he filled his syringe with the whiskey
and injected it into the arm. Eagerly he waited with his hand upon
the feebly fluttering heart. "My God! it's coming, I do believe!"
he cried. "Now a little strychnine," he whispered. "There, that
ought to help."
Once more he rushed to his canoe and brought his cooking kit and
blanket. In five minutes he had a fire going and his tea pail
swung over it with a little more than a cupful of water in it. In
five minutes more he had half a cup of hot tea ready. By this time
the heartbeat could be detected every moment growing stronger.
Into the tea he poured a little of the stimulant. "If I can only
get this down," he muttered, chafing at the limp hands. Once more
he lifted the head, pried open the shut jaws, and tried to pour a
few drops of the liquid down. After repeated attempts he succeeded.
Then for the first time he observed that his hands were covered with
blood. Gently he lifted the head and, examining the back of it,
detected a great jagged wound. "Looks bad, bad." He felt the bone
carefully and shook his head. "Fracture, I fear." Heating some more
water he cleansed and dressed the wound. Half an hour more he spent
in his anxious struggle, with intense activity utilizing every
precious moment, when to his infinite joy and relief the life began
to come slowly back. "Now I must get him to the hospital."
There were still five miles to paddle, but it was down stream and
there were no portages. With swift despatch he cut a large armful
of balsam boughs. With these and his blankets he made a bed in his
canoe, cutting out the bow thwart, then lifting the wounded man and
picking his steps with great care, he carried him to the canoe and
laid him upon the balsam boughs on his right side. The moment the
weight came upon that side a groan burst from the pallid lips.
"Something wrong there," muttered the doctor, turning him slightly
over. "Ah, shoulder out. I'll just settle this right now." By
dexterous manipulation the dislocation was reduced, and at once the
patient sank down upon the bed of boughs and lay quite still. A
little further stimulation brought back the heart to a steadier
beat. "Now, my boy," he said to himself, as he took his place
kneeling in the stern of the canoe, "give her every ounce you
have." For half an hour without pause, except twice to give his
patient stimulant, the sweeping paddle and the swaying body kept
their rhythmic swing, till down the last riffle shot the canoe and
in a minute more was at the Landing.
"Duprez! Here, quick!" The doctor stood in the door of the
stopping place, wet as if he had come from the river, his voice
raucous and his face white.
"Mon Dieu!" exclaimed the Frenchman, "what de mattaire?"
The doctor swept a glance about the room. "Sick man," he said
briefly. "I want this bed. Get your buckboard, quick." He seized
the bed and carried it out before the eyes of the astonished
Duprez.
Duprez was a man slow of speech but quick to act, and by the time
the bed had been arranged on the buckboard he had his horse between
the shafts.
"Now then, Duprez, give me a hand," said the doctor.
"Certainment. Bon Dieu! Dat's de bon preechere! Not dead, heh?"
"No," said the doctor, glancing sharply into the haggard face while
he placed his fingers upon the pulse. "No. Now get on. Drive
carefully, but make time."
In a few minutes they reached the road that led to the hospital,
which was well graded and smooth. Duprez sent along his pony at a
lope and in a short space of time they reached the door of the
hospital, where they were met by Orderly Ben Fallows on duty.
"Barney! By the livin' jumpin' Jemima Jebbs!" cried Ben. "What on
earth--"
But the doctor cut him short. "Ben, get the Matron, quick, and get
a bed ready with warm blankets and hot water bottles. Go, man!
Don't gape there!"
Still gaping his amazement, Ben skipped in through the hall and up
the stair as fast as his wooden leg would allow him. He reached
the office door. "Miss Margaret," he gasped, "Barney's at the door
with a sick man. Wants a bed ready. We 'aven't got one--and--"
The look upon the matron's face interrupted the flow of his words.
"Barney?" she said, rising slowly to her feet. "Barney?" she said
again, her hand clutching the desk and holding hard. "What do you
mean, Ben?" The words came slowly.
Margaret took a step toward him. "Ben," she said, in breathless
haste, "get my room ready. But first tell Nurse Crane to come to
me quick. Go, Ben."
The orderly hurried away, leaving her alone. With trembling hands
she shut the door, turned toward her desk, and there stood, both
hands pressed hard to her heart, fighting hard to control the
tumultuous tides that surged through her heart and thundered in her
ears. "Barney! Barney!" she whispered. "Oh, Barney, at last!"
The blue eyes were wide open and all aglow with the tender light of
her great love. "Barney," she said over and over, "my love, my
love, my--ah, not mine--" A sob caught her voice. Over her desk
hung a copy of Hoffman's great picture, the Christ kneeling in
Gethsemane. She went close to the picture. "O Christ!" she cried
brokenly, "I, too! Help me!" A knock came to the door, Nurse
Crane entered. Margaret quickly turned toward her desk again.
"Dr. Bailey is at the door with a patient," said the nurse.
"Dr. Bailey?" echoed Margaret, not daring to look up, her trembling
hands fluttering among the papers on the desk. "Go to him, Nurse,
and get what he wants. Take my room. I shall follow in a moment."
Once more she was alone. Again she stood before the picture of the
Christ, the words of the great submission ringing through the
chambers of her soul. "Not my will but Thine be done." She
pressed nearer the picture, gazing into that strong, patient,
suffering face through the rain of welcome tears. "O Christ!" she
whispered, "dear blessed Christ! I understand--now. Help me!
Help me!" Then, after a pause, "Not my will! Not my will!"
The strife was past. Quietly she went to the lavatory that stood
in the corner of her office, bathed her eyes, smoothed away the
signs of struggle from her face, and went forth serene to her duty
and her cross. In the hall she met Barney. With a quick, light
step she was at his side, both hands stretched out. "Barney!"
"Margaret!" was all they said. For a moment or two Barney stood
holding her hands, gazing without a word into the sweet face, so
pale, so beautiful, so serenely strong. Twice he essayed to speak,
but the words choked in his throat. Turning abruptly away he
pointed to the figure under the grey blanket on the camp bed.
"I've brought--you--Dick," at last he said hoarsely.
"Dick! Hurt? Not--" She halted before the dreaded word.
At once all other thoughts and emotions gave way to the immediate
demands of their common duty. They had work to do, and they had
trained themselves to obey without thought of self that Divine call
to serve the suffering. Together they toiled at their work,
Margaret noting with delighted wonder the quick fingers and the
finished skill that cleansed and probed and dressed the wound in
the head and made thorough examination for other injury or ill,
Barney keenly conscious of the efficiency of the silent, steady
helper at his side whose quick eye and hand anticipated his every
want. At length their work was done and they stood looking down
upon the haggard face.
"He is resting now," said Barney, in a low voice. "The fracture is
not serious, I think."
"Poor Dick," said Margaret, passing her hand over his brow.
At her touch and voice Dick moaned and opened his eyes. Barney
quickly stepped back out of sight. For a moment or two the eyes
wandered about the room, then rested on Margaret's face in a
troubled, inquiring gaze.
"What is it, Dick, dear?" said Margaret, bending over him.
For answer his hand began to move feebly toward his breast as if
seeking something.
"I know. The letter, Dick?" A look of intelligence lighted the
eye. "That's all right, Dick. I shall get it to Barney. Barney
is here, you know."
A hand grasped her arm. "Hush!" said Barney in stern command.
"Say nothing about me." But she heeded him not. For a moment
longer the sick man's gaze lingered on her face. A faint smile of
content overspread the drawn features, then the look of intelligence
faded and the eyes closed wearily.
"Come," said Barney, moving toward the door, "he is better quiet."
Leaving the nurse in charge, they went together toward the office.
"Where did you find him?" asked Margaret as she gave Barney a seat.
Then Barney told her the story of how he had chanced upon the canoe
and had discovered Dick lying insensible in the woods.
"It was God's leading, Barney," said Margaret gently, when the
story was done; but to this he made no reply. "Is there serious
danger, do you think?" she inquired in an anxious voice.
"He will recover," replied Barney. "All he requires is careful
nursing, and that you can give him. I shall wait till to-morrow."
"Surely there is much yet to do, and you have just begun to do such
great things. Why should you leave now?"
Barney waited a few moments in silence as if pondering an answer.
"Margaret, I must go," he finally burst forth. "You know I must
go. I can't live within touch of him and forget!"
"Well, forgive, if you like," he replied sullenly.
"Barney," replied Margaret earnestly, "this is unworthy of you, and
in the face of God's mercy to-day how can you hold resentment in
your heart?"
"How can I? God knows, or the Devil. For three years I have
fought it, but it is there. It is there!" He struck his hand hard
upon his breast. "I can't forget that he ruined my life! But for
him I believe in my soul I should have won--her to me! At a
critical moment he came in and ruined--"
"Barney! Barney, listen to me!" cried Margaret impetuously.
"No, you must listen to me. Sit down." Barney obeyed her word and
sat down. "Now, hear me, and hear me fairly. I am not going to
say that Dick was free from blame, nor was Iola either. Whose was
the greater I can't tell. They were both young and, to a certain
extent, inexperienced in the ways of life. Circumstances threw
them much together and on terms of almost brotherly and sisterly
intimacy. That was a mistake. They ignored conventions that can
never be safely ignored. Just at that time Dick's life was made
hard for him. His Church had rejected him."
"Yes, rejected him. He was refused license by the Presbytery, was
branded as a heretic and outcast from work." Margaret's voice grew
bitter. "Do you wonder that he grew hard? Perhaps they could not
help it--I can't say--but he grew hard. Yes, and worse than that,
grew away from his faith, from his friends, and from those things
that keep men straight and strong. He grew weak. The hour of
temptation came upon him. You and I have seen enough of that side
of life to know what that means. He broke faith with you--no, not
with you. He was loyal to you, but he broke faith with himself and
with her. For a single moment, that moment at which you appeared,
he yielded to passion, and bitterly, terribly, has he suffered
since that moment. How terribly no one knows. He has tried to
find you, but you would not be found. He wronged you, Barney, but
you have made him and all of us suffer much." The voice that had
gone on so bravely and so firmly here suddenly trembled and broke.
"Made you suffer!" cried Barney, with bitter scorn. "How can you
speak of suffering? You have everything! I have lost all!"
"Everything?" echoed Margaret faintly. "Ah, Barney, how little you
know! But, no matter, God has brought you together and you must
not do this wicked thing. You must not continue to break our
hearts."
"Break your hearts? Margaret, what's the use of words? I had a
heart, too, and a brother whom I loved and trusted as myself, yes,
more than myself, and--I had--Iola. All I have lost. My work
satisfies me for a few months, but try as I can this awful thing
hunts me down and drives me mad. There is nothing in life left for
me. And there might have been much but for--"
"Stop, Barney!" cried Margaret impulsively. "There is much still
left for you. God is good. How much better than we. You can't
forgive a fellow-sinner. Oh, shame! But He forgives and forgets,
and surely you ought to try--"
"Try! Try! Heavens above, Margaret! Try! Do you think I haven't
tried? That thing is there! there!" smiting on his breast again.
"Can you tell me how to rid myself of it?"
"Yes, Barney, I think I can tell you. God's great goodness will do
this for you. Listen," she said, putting up her hand to stay his
words, "God is bringing a great joy to you to shame you and to
soften you. Here, read this." She handed him Iola's letter, went
to the window, and stood with her back to him, looking out upon the
great sweeping valley below.
"Margaret!" The hoarse voice called her back to him. His hard,
proud, sullen reserve was shattered, gone. His lips were
quivering, his hands trembling. The girl was touched to the heart.
"Margaret," he cried brokenly, "what does this mean?" He was
terribly shaken.
"It means that she wants you, that she needs you. Dick was going
to-morrow to bring her back to you, Barney. That was his one
desire."
"To bring her to me? To bring her back to me? Dick? Dear old
boy! and I-- Oh, Margaret!" He put his trembling hands out to
her. "Forgive me! God forgive me! Poor Dick! I'll see him!" He
started toward the door. "No, not how," he cried, striving in vain
to control himself. "I am mad! mad! For three long years I have
carried this cursed thing in my heart! It's gone! It's gone,
Margaret! Do you hear? It's gone!" He was shouting aloud. "I
feel right toward Dick, my brother!"
"Hush, Barney dear," said the girl, tears running down her face,
"you will wake him."
"Yes, yes," he cried, in an eager whisper, "I'll be careful. Poor
old boy, he has suffered, too. Dear old Dick! And she wants me!
I'll go to-night! Yes, to-night! What's the date?" He tore at
the envelope with trembling hands. The letter dropped to the
floor. Margaret caught it up and opened it for him. "A month ago
and more! Yes, I'll go to-night. Oh, Margaret, what a blasted
fool I am! I can't get myself in hand." Suddenly he threw himself
into his chair. "Here!" he ground out between his teeth, "get
quiet!" He sat for a few moments absolutely still, gathering
strength to command himself. At length he got himself in hand.
"No," he said in a quiet voice, "I shall not go tonight. I shall
wait till Dick is better. Just now he must be kept quiet. In the
morning I expect to see him very much himself. We can only wait
and see."
Through the night they waited, Barney struggling mightily to hold
himself in perfect control, Margaret quietly doing what was to be
done, her whole spirit breathing of that self-forgetting love which
finds its highest joy in the joy of another. At the break of day
the nurse came to the door and found them still waiting.
"Mr. Boyle is awake and is asking for you, Miss Robertson."
"Let me go to him," cried Barney. "Don't fear." His voice was
still vibrating, but his manner was calm and steady. He was master
of himself again.
"Yes," said Margaret, "go to him." Then as the door closed she
stood once more before the Gethsemane scene. "Thank God, thank
God," she said softly, "for them the pain is over."
For half an hour she waited and then went up to the sickroom. She
opened the door softly, went in and stood gazing till her eyes grew
dim. On the pillow, face down, Barney's head lay close to Dick's,
whose arm was thrown about his brother's neck, and on Dick's face
shone a look of rapturous peace. As Margaret moved to leave the
room Dick called her in a voice faint, but full of joy.
"Margaret," he said, a smile breaking like light through a dark
cloud, "my head was broken, but I'd have all the bones in my body
broken, just to have Barney set them. We're all right, eh, boy?"
Slowly Barney raised his face, tear-marked, worn, but radiant with
a peace it had not known for many a day. "Yes, old chap," he said
in a voice still tremulous in spite of all his self-command, "we're
right again, and, please God, we'll keep so."