Mary’s first instinct was to pour out some warm water, and bringing it with a sponge, to say, ‘Would not this refresh you?’
Averil moved petulantly; but the soft warm stream was so grateful to her burning brow, that she could not resist; she put her head back, and submitted like a child to have her face bathed, saying, ‘Thank you.’
Mary then begged to remove her tight heavy dress, and make her comfortable in her dressing-gown.
‘Oh, I can’t! Then I could not go back.’
‘Yes, you could; this is quite a dress; besides, one can move so much more quietly without crinoline.’
‘I didn’t think of that;’ and she stood up, and unfastened her hooks. ‘Perhaps Dr. May would let me go back now!’ as a mountain of mohair and scarlet petticoat remained on the floor, upborne by an overgrown steel mouse-trap.
‘Perhaps he will by and by; but he said you must sleep first.’
‘Sleep—I can’t sleep. There’s no one but me. I couldn’t sleep.’
‘Then at least let me try to freshen you up. There. You don’t know what good it used to do my sister Blanche, for me to brush her hair. I like it.’
And Mary obtained a dreamy soothed submission, so that she almost thought she was brushing her victim to sleep in her chair, before the maid came up with the viands that Dr. May had ordered.
‘I can’t eat that,’ said Averil, with almost disgust. ‘Take it away.’
‘Please don’t,’ said Mary. ‘Is that the way you use me, Miss Ward, when I come to drink tea with you?’
‘Oh, I beg your pardon,’ was the mechanical answer.
Mary having made the long hair glossy once more, into a huge braid, and knotted it up, came forth, and insisted that they were to be comfortable over their grilled chickens’ legs. She was obliged to make her own welcome, and entertain her hostess; and strenuously she worked, letting the dry lips imbibe a cup of tea, before she attempted the solids; then coaxing and commanding, she gained her point, and succeeded in causing a fair amount of provisions to be swallowed; after which Averil seemed more inclined to linger in enjoyment of the liquids, as though the feverish restlessness were giving place to a sense of fatigue and need of repose.
‘This is all wrong,’ said she, with a faint bewildered smile, as Mary filled up her cup for her. ‘I ought to be treating you as guest, Miss May.’
‘Oh, don’t call me Miss May! Call me Mary. Think me a sister. You know I have known something of like trouble, only I was younger, and I had my sisters.’
‘I do not seem to have felt anything yet,’ said Averil, passing her hands over her face. ‘I seem to be made of stone.’
‘You have done: and that is better than feeling.’
‘Done! and how miserably! Oh, the difference it might have made, if I had been a better nurse!’
‘Papa and Dr. Spencer both say you have been a wonderful nurse, considering—’ the last word came out before Mary was aware.
‘Oh, Dr. May has been so kind and so patient with me, I shall never forget it. Even when I scalded his fingers with bringing him that boiling water—but I always do wrong when he is there—and now he won’t let me go back to Leonard.’
‘But, Averil, the best nurse in the world can’t hold out for ever. People must sleep, and make themselves fit to go on.’
‘Not when there is only one:’ and she gasped.
‘All the more reason, when there is but one. Perhaps it is because you are tired out that you get nervous and agitated. You will be quite different after a rest.’
‘Are you sure?’ whispered Averil, with her eyes rounded, ‘are you sure that is all the reason?’
‘What do you mean?’ said Mary.
Averil drew in her breath, and squeezed both hands tight on her chest, as she spoke very low: ‘They sent me away from mamma—they told me papa wanted me: then they sent me from him; they said I was better with Leonard; and—and I said to myself, nothing should make me leave Leonard.’
‘It was not papa—my father—that sent you without telling you,’ said Mary, confidently.
‘No,’ said Averil.
‘No; I have heard him say that he would take all risks, rather than deceive anybody,’ said Mary, eagerly. ‘I have heard him and Dr. Spencer argue about what they called pious frauds, and he always said they were want of faith. You may trust him. He told me Leonard was in the state when calm sleep was chiefly wanted. I know he would think it cruel not to call you if there were need; and I do not believe there will be need.’
Something like this was reiterated in different forms; and though Averil never regularly yielded, yet as they sat on, there came pauses in the conversation, when Mary saw her nodding, and after one or two vibrations in her chair, she looked up with lustreless glassy eyes. Mary took one of these semi-wakened moments, and in the tone of caressing authority that had been already found effectual, said she must sleep in bed; took no notice of the murmur of refusal, but completed the undressing, and fairly deposited her in her bed.
Mary’s scrupulous conscience was distressed at having thus led to the omission of all evening orisons; but if her own simple-hearted loving supplications at the orphan’s bedside could compensate for their absence, she did her utmost. Then, as both the room-door and that of the sick-chamber had been left open, she stole into the passage, where she could see her father, seated at the table, and telegraphed to him a sign of her success. He durst not move, but he smiled and nodded satisfaction; and Mary, after tidying the room, and considering with herself, took off her more cumbrous garments, wrapped herself in a cloak, and lay down beside Averil, not expecting to sleep, but passing to thoughts of Harry, and of that 23rd Psalm, which they had agreed to say at the same hour every night. By how many hours was Harry beforehand with her? That was a calculation that to Mary was always like the beads of the chaplain of Norham Castle. Certain it is, that after she had seen Harry lighting a fire to broil chickens’ legs in a Chinese temple, under the willow-pattern cannon-ball tree, and heard Henry Ward saying it was not like a lieutenant in the navy, she found herself replying, ‘Use before gentility;’ and in the enunciation of this—her first moral sentiment—discovered that it was broad daylight.
What o’clock it was she could not guess. Averil was sound asleep, breathing deeply and regularly, so that it was; a pleasure to listen to her; and Mary did not fear wakening her by a shoeless voyage of discovery to the place whence Dr. May was visible.
He turned at once, and with his noiseless tread came to her. ‘Asleep still? So is he. All right. Here, waken me the moment he stirs.’
And rather by sign than word, he took Mary into the sickroom, indicated a chair, and laid himself on a sofa, where he was instantaneously sound asleep, before his startled daughter had quite taken everything in; but she had only to glance at his haggard wearied face, to be glad to be there, so as to afford him even a few moments of vigorous slumber with all his might.
In some awe, she looked round, not venturing to stir hand or foot. Her chair was in the full draught of the dewy morning breeze, so chilly, that she drew her shawl tightly about her; but she knew that this had been an instance of her father’s care, and if she wished to make the slightest move, it was only to secure a fuller view of the patient, from whom she was half cut off by a curtain at the foot of the bed. A sort of dread, however, made Mary gaze at everything around her before she brought her eyes upon him—her father’s watch on the table, indicating ten minutes to four, the Minster Tower in the rising sunlight—nay, the very furniture of the room, and Dr. May’s position, before she durst familiarize herself with Leonard’s appearance—he whom she had last seen as a sturdy, ruddy, healthful boy, looking able to outweigh two of his friend Aubrey.