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<h2> CHAPTER VIII.—SOMETHING OF A SCRAPE. </h2>
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<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t certainly would
seem a very unceremonious proceeding to escort a little party across the
great, wide sea, and then follow the fortunes of some of the group, to the
utter exclusion of others; so if you please we will just take a look right
away at the snug little English cottage to which Chris Hartley hurried the
same April morning that he reluctantly took leave of Marie-Celeste at the
steamer. The cottage itself is just such a dear little place as you find
nowhere else save in England. It is straw-thatched, and thatch and walls
alike are mellow with the same soft grav of time and weather. The cottage
stands close to the river Thames, on the outskirts of the town of Nuneham.
In front is an even hawthorn hedge, that reaches round to the back as
well, and encloses a quaint little kitchen garden. Beyond the hedge lies a
pasture meadow, where a flock of sheep are grazing, and encircling the
meadow another hedge, less closely clipped, and so making bold to riot
here and there in a snowy wealth of hawthorn blossom, A fine Alderney cow,
with coat as well cared for as the gray mare's in the stable, is
also enjoying the sweet grass of the meadow, and the shining milk, pans
ranged beneath the kitchen window bear witness to the generous service she
renders. Within the little cottage all is as prim and dainty and neat as
without, for the sweet-faced old housewife gives as close heed to the
household as the “gudeman” of the house to the flock and the
cow and the hedgerows. And this was the home to which Chris had come—to
the grandparents who had cared for his orphaned boyhood, and whom he never
would have left but for the more certain prospect of well-paid work across
the water. And now five years have gone by, and having grown strong and
manly, meantime, through his contact with the world, Chris is back on his
first home visit, and you may be sure he has not come empty-handed. For
the grandfather there is a new wallet with twenty five-pound notes laid
between its leather-scented covers, and for the grandmother a labor-saving
gift that will never cease to be a marvel—a wonder-working churn
that turns Bess's milk to butter in just twelve seconds over a
minute. And best of all, Chris himself is just the same thoughtful fellow
he left them, and at once settles down to a general supervision of the
farm, that leaves the old man free to smoke his brier-wood pipe and read
the news from morning till night, if he cares to.</p>
<p>“You are spoiling us, Chris,” old Mrs. Hartley would say every
time Chris chanced to be within hearing distance, when she brought the
golden butter to the surface from the depths of the uncanny churn; and
Chris as invariably remarking, “There is no fear of that, granny
dear,” would look as pleased and surprised as though she had not
known she could count upon every word of his answer. And now, you see, you
have an idea of the quiet, eventless life Chris led on this home visit
until one evening in the latter part of June, when something happened. The
lane that ran past the meadow and up to the Hartley cottage branched out
from the road that led directly to Nuneham from Oxford, and in fine
weather there was much driving out that way, so that toward evening Chris
would sometimes take a seat on a low gate-post that marked the entrance to
the lane and watch the people as they passed. There were always more or
less college men among them, driving in stylish drags behind spirited
horses or in shabby livery turn-outs, according to their station in life,
or rather the condition of their pocket-books. And so it chanced that
Chris noticed on this particular June evening—as, in fact, no one
could help noticing—a very merry party who rolled by in a dog-cart.
They were far too merry, in fact, and so noisy that teams in front of them
were glad to make way for them, and those they met most desirous to give
them a wide berth. It was evident, however, that the young fellow who held
the reins knew perfectly well what he was about, and how to handle his
horses, so that no danger was actually to be feared in that direction. But
what was true at five o'clock in the afternoon was not true a few
hours later, and any one who had seen the same party turn their faces
toward home, after a rollicking supper and no end of good cheer at
Holly-tree Inn, would have prophesied disaster before they reached it.
Wondering if they would make their return trip in safety, Chris himself
happened to favor them with his last waking thought, ere he fell asleep in
his little room under the eaves—a cosey little room that still was
bright even at ten o'clock with the glow of the long English
twilight. It was this last conscious thought, no doubt, that made him
quick to waken two hours later, when a low, penetrating “Helloa
there!” broke the stillness. Springing to the window, he was able to
discern two or three men supporting some heavy burden and standing in
front of the cottage.</p>
<p>“Be as still as possible, please,” he said in a loud whisper,
mindful of the old people; “I will be down in a moment,” and
instantly recalling the party he had seen drive past to Nuneham, there
seemed no need to ask who they were or what had happened.</p>
<p>But expeditious as Chris had been, Mrs. Hartley, in gray wrapper and
frilled night-cap, was at the door before him.</p>
<p>“Some mishap on the road, Chris,” she said, her hand trembling
on the bolt.</p>
<p>“Yes, sure, granny; but you'd best let me open the door.”</p>
<p>“We've had an ugly accident,” said one of the men, as
the light from within fell upon them; and then as Chris held the door wide
open they pressed into the little sitting-room with their gruesome burden.</p>
<p>“Put him here,” Chris directed, clearing the way toward a low
box-lounge. “He may be badly hurt,” he added, but speaking
roughly, as though even his pity could scarce conceal his disgust that men
should ever allow themselves to get into such a sorry plight.</p>
<p>“We couldn't tell out there in the dark,” answered the
only one in the party who seemed to have his wits about him. The other two
had at once made their way to the nearest chairs, and with steps so
unsteady that Chris wondered how they had been able to lend any aid
whatsoever.</p>
<p>“Was he unconscious when you got to him?” he asked,
unfastening the clothing at the injured man's throat.</p>
<p>“Yes; he hasn't seemed to know anything from the first. It
looks almost as though he might be dying, doesn't it?” and the
young fellow stood gazing helplessly down at his friend, the very picture
of despair.</p>
<p>“No; I don't think it's as bad as that. You've
been run away with, of course,” for the whole party were covered
with mud and dirt from head to foot, and there was evidence of two or
three ugly cuts and bruises among them.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the other; “it was a clean upset, and Ted
here was driving, so that the reins got tangled about him, and he was
dragged full a hundred yards or so. If the horses hadn't succeeded
in breaking away from the trap the moment that it went over, I should have
been killed surely, for it fell on top of me in some way, and as it was, I
could scarcely get from under it;” and the young fellow's
blanched face grew a shade whiter as he realized how narrow had been his
escape. Meanwhile, with a little maid to hold the light, Mrs. Hartley
searched through a tiny corner cupboard for a flask that had been
carefully stowed away behind some larger bottles, and then poured a
generous share of its contents into a glass held in readiness in the
little maid's other hand.</p>
<p>“You give it to him, Chris,” she said, not daring to trust her
shaking hands; and raising the poor fellow's head, Chris pressed the
glass to his lips. As he swallowed the brandy his eyes opened for a
moment, but there was no sign of returning consciousness.</p>
<p>“Now, the next thing,” said Chris, “is to get a doctor,
and I'll have to drive into Nuneham for him. Do you suppose one of
your friends there can help me harness?” but one of the friends was
already asleep, and the attitude of the other showed that no assistance
was to be looked for in that direction.</p>
<p>“What's to be done with them, mother?” asked old Mr.
Hartley, who, enveloped in an old-fashioned, large-patterned
dressing-gown, had arrived rather tardily upon the scene, and had stood
for several seconds glaring down at the two disgraceful specimens.</p>
<p>“Martha is making the guest-room ready,” replied Mrs. Hartley,
showing she was not too old to think ahead in an emergency, and yet
drawing a deep sigh with the next breath at the thought of that best
spare-room being put to so ignoble a service. Chris had himself been
thinking it was rather a serious question to know how to dispose of them,
and was glad to have Mrs. Hartley herself suggest the way.</p>
<p>“Thank goodness you've got your senses left,” said
Chris, turning to the young fellow, who really seemed anxious to render
every possible service; “and if we get them into the room there you
can put them to bed, can't you? while I go for the doctor;”
and in a voice scarcely audible from mortification the young fellow
replied that he thought he could; so after some difficulty in making them
understand the move impending, the two men were successfully landed in the
best spare-room.</p>
<p>“You'll need this,” said Chris, pushing a clothes-brush
and a whisk-broom on to a chair, “and you'll find plenty of
water on the stand yonder;” then he came out and closed the door, to
the infinite and audible relief of the serving-maid Martha. Indeed but for
the all too serious side of the whole affair, it would have been amusing
to watch that little maid. So great was her horror, either by education or
intuition, of the state of inebriety, that the moment she surmised that at
least two of these midnight visitors were bordering on the same, she could
conceive of no means strong enough to express her disapproval. Every time
she had come anywhere near them she had gathered her skirts about her as
though in fear of actual contamination, and with her pretty head high in
the air, as she moved away, would look askance over her shoulder as though
not at all sure even then of being at a safe distance. Indeed, Chris
himself could not quite suppress a smile as he saw the relief expressed in
every line of Martha's face at the click of the closing door.</p>
<p>“How did it happen, mother?” asked Mr. Hartley, after a long
interval in which no word had been spoken.</p>
<p>“I have not heard yet, Peter; but I don't believe we had
better talk. He seems to be growing uneasy. Oh, I do wish Chris would
come!”</p>
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<p>“Now, don't you get flustered, mother—<i>don't</i>
get flustered,” bending over the freshly lighted fire and spreading
his hands to its blaze.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Mrs. Hartley had taken her station at the side of the senseless
fellow on the couch and, her old face tense with anxiety, was rubbing the
ice-cold hands.</p>
<p>“And now the doctor, Chris, as quick as ever you can,” she
said gravely; and Chris, realizing the need for haste, was out of the
house before she had finished the sentence, and the gray mare made better
time that night into Nuneham than for many a year before.</p>
<p>“You've done splendid, so far. 'Tain't likely a
strong-looking fellow like that's going to go under easy.”</p>
<p>“There's no tellin', Peter—there's no tellin';
strength don't count for much if one's head is hurt past
mending.”</p>
<p>Just then the door of the spare-room opened, and the young man, closing it
gently after him, was just in time to hear the last words.</p>
<p>“Oh, you don't think it's so bad as that?” he said
in an almost agonized whisper, as he came to the side of the couch.</p>
<p>“There's no tellin',” repeated Mrs. Hartley very
seriously; and then as she looked up and saw, now that dust and grime and
the stains from two or three slight cuts were removed, that the face above
was a good face, after all, her heart went out in sympathy, and she added
gently, “but we'll hope for the best, dear—we'll
hope for the best. Chris must come with the doctor very soon now
whereupon, for some reason or other, the poor fellow broke down utterly,
and sinking into the nearest chair, buried his face in his hands.</p>
<p>“The heart knoweth its own bitterness,” said Mr. Hartley
solemnly, turning over the back-log of the fire and shaking his head
gravely from side to side.</p>
<p>“I doubt if that's what the young man's needing just
now, father,” remarked Mrs. Hartley dryly; and although evidently
resenting the implied reproof, Mr. Hartley wisely determined to keep his
own counsel; and for many minutes thereafter the heavy breathing of the
men asleep in the next room and the crackling of the wood upon the
andirons were the only sounds that broke the silence. Now and then Martha
came in with a cloth freshly wet with cold water from the well—for
Mrs. Hartley suspected some form of injury to the brain—and then
slipped as noiselessly out again. At last the sound of wheels in the lane
without, and then for the first time the young man raised his face from
his hands and hurried to meet the doctor. As they came in together he was
apparently explaining just how the accident had happened, and the doctor's
face looked grave with apprehension.</p>
<p>“What is your friend's name?” he asked as he reached the
lounge.</p>
<p>“Theodore—-Morris,” after a second's hesitation.
Convinced that he had not given an honest answer, the doctor looked keenly
into his face a moment; “and yours?” he added.</p>
<p>“Allyn, sir,” returning his glance as keenly, and then not
another word was spoken, while the doctor carefully looked his patient
over. Close beside him stood Mrs. Hartley, trying to read his conclusions
in advance, and Martha stood just beyond, eager to render the slightest
service, while Chris, with steady hand, held the light now high, now low,
according to the signal from the doctor.</p>
<p>“It is a case, doubtless, of concussion of the brain,” he said
at last; “just how serious I cannot at once determine, but, first
thing, Mrs. Hartley, we must get this poor fellow to bed.”</p>
<p>“It will have to be in my little spare-bedroom, then, doctor; my
best room is already appropriated. Bring clean linen from the chest
quickly, Martha;” and hurrying into the little room, mistress and
maid soon had everything in readiness for the unexpected guest.</p>
<p>Tenderly and carefully they lifted and then carried the unconscious man,
and as they laid him gently down in the cool bed he drew a long, deep
breath, as though in some vague way appreciative of a grateful change.
Then one thing and another was done at the doctor's bidding, until
at last there was need of nothing further, and old Mrs. Hartley, first
sending the little maid to her room above stairs, crept off to bed, more
utterly worn out and exhausted than for many a weary day. Chris threw
himself on the living-room lounge, and was soon fast asleep, and the
doctor, sitting near the bed, and where he could closely watch his
patient, motioned young Allyn to draw a chair close to his side.</p>
<p>“Now, my friend,” he said, “I want you to tell me the
real name of your friend here, for I am convinced you have not done so,
and then I want you to give me a true account of this whole deplorable
affair. It will not disturb him in the least if you keep your voice
carefully lowered.”</p>
<p>Young Allyn did not answer for several seconds. He sat leaning way forward
in the chair he had drawn to the doctor's side, his elbows on his
knees and his chin resting on his tightly clasped hands. He was evidently
thinking hard, and it was easy to read the play of intense emotion on his
face.</p>
<p>“Dr. Arnold,” he said finally, as though he had slowly thought
his way out to a decision, “my friend's name is Theodore
Harris, but it is the first time he has ever been mixed up in anything of
this sort, and should he get over it, I wanted to spare him the
mortification of its being known if I could. Do you think he is so much
hurt that his family—that his brother—ought to be sent for?”</p>
<p>“We can't tell about that to-night. The opiate I have given
him will account for this heavy sleep. Everything will depend upon how he
comes out of it in the morning.”</p>
<p>“And if it does prove not as serious as you feared”—trying
to steady a voice that trembled in spite of him—“what then?”</p>
<p>“Two or three weeks of careful nursing.”</p>
<p>“Will they let us stay here, do you think?”</p>
<p>“They'll have to for a while. It would be out of the question
to move him.”</p>
<p>“Oh, but it's a crying shame, this whole business!” and
young Allyn, leaning back in his chair, looked the picture of anger and
chagrin.</p>
<p>“You seem like a self-respecting fellow,” said the doctor,
scrutinizing him closely; “perhaps it is your first time, too.”</p>
<p>“Yes, it does happen to be but, as though there was little or no
credit in that, there is some excuse for Ted—he is younger than I
and easily led; but for me there is none whatever.”</p>
<p>“You ought to know,” said the doctor dryly. “And your
friends in the room yonder, are they at all responsible for this first
time of yours and young Harris's? Come, Mr. Allyn, don't wait
for me to question you. If you are as anxious as you claim to hush this
affair up, you must make a clean breast of things with me. I can, of
course, be of service to you in the matter.”</p>
<p>“Really, Dr. Arnold, there is not much to tell beyond what you
already know. We belong up at Oxford, of course, and Harris here has
plenty of money and plenty of friends—not always the best, I am
sorry to say. The two men in the other room there are known around town as
jolly good fellows; neither of them are college men, but they have dogged
Harris's footsteps ever since they came to know him, a year or so
ago, and have done all in their power to drag him down. To-night they have
come pretty near making an end of both of us. I've warned Harris
against them time and again, but when they planned this afternoon to drive
up to Nuneham in Harris's trap for a champagne supper, I took to the
scheme, and I hadn't the moral courage to decline myself or to
persuade Ted to do so.”</p>
<p>“How do you and Harris happen to be in Oxford anyway, now that the
term is over?” queried the doctor.</p>
<p>“We thought we were having too good a time to go home.”</p>
<p>“And you have found out your mistake?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir;” and the pain and mortification on young Allyn's
face assured the doctor that the lesson of the hour was being well taken
to heart.</p>
<p>“Where does Harris live, Mr. Allyn?”</p>
<p>“We both live at Windsor, sir; Harris has a younger brother, but no
father or mother; and if Ted only gets over this, he need never know
anything about it. We were going to start on a long driving trip
to-morrow; so we're not expected up at Windsor, and Ted's the
kind of fellow, Dr. Arnold, that if he found out that people knew about a
scrape like this, I believe he'd grow perfectly reckless, and there
wouldn't be any such thing as saving him;” and there was such
suppressed earnestness in the young fellow's voice that no one could
have doubted his sincerity for a moment.</p>
<p>“But the accident to-night, just how did that happen?”</p>
<p>“I think—yes, I'm sure—Ted had taken a little too
much; but we would have gotten home all right but for”—nodding
in the direction of Mrs. Hartley's best room. “There was no
doing anything with them, and finally one of them tried to get the reins
from Ted, and then the horses, that need to be carefully handled at best,
broke into a clean run. Where they are now, land knows!”</p>
<p>“Mr. Allyn,” said Dr. Arnold, after several minutes of
suspense, “if Mr. Harris's condition proves not to be serious
I will do what I can to shield you both.”</p>
<p>“Oh, don't bother about me,” as though he honestly felt
he was not worth it.</p>
<p>“Yes, I will bother about you, for since you told me you live at
Windsor, I begin to suspect you are Canon Allyn's son.”</p>
<p>“The more's the pity, Dr. Arnold.”</p>
<p>“The more's the reason for my doing all in my power to give
both of you another chance But we won't talk any more. Now wrap
yourself in that comforter Chris has laid in the chair for you, and try
and get a little sleep.”</p>
<p>All this while poor wayward Ted, whose name you must have guessed almost
from the first, was lying wholly oblivious to everything about him,
muttering now and then a few delirious, incoherent words, and yet by
degrees subsiding into a gentle, regular breathing that the professional
ear was quick to detect, and that was full of good omen for the waking in
the morning.</p>
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