<h2><SPAN name="page180"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> mudcat season has come.
After the winter’s diet of salt herring, and before the
open season for bass and pickerel, comes the mudcat, alias
bullhead, to give us the taste of fresh fish again. From
April fifteenth until the fifteenth of May is the closed season
for pickerel, and from April fifteenth to June fifteenth it is
forbidden to fish for bass, so now the humble mudcat comes to his
own.</p>
<p>Over on the Drapeaus’ shore the men are all skinning
bullheads for market. They have rigged up a machine that
twists off the heads and strips off the skins at one turn of a
handle. Andy Drapeau dips the fish out of the live box,
Black Jack skins and beheads them, George Drapeau rakes away the
offal, Harry Spriggins and Lewis Drapeau pack the fish in
barrels. The whole shore reeks of them, the beach is red
with their gore, for your bullhead is a very bloody fish.
He is an ugly creature—great head, thorny spines,
wicked-looking mouth, but he tastes very good indeed, if one has
not seen Black Jack skin him.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page181"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>I
have come in for the usual present, and have to restrain my
friends, or they would give me at least a half barrel.</p>
<p>“Kin you git their inside out, ef I take the hide offen
them?” asks Black Jack. And I assure him that for the
sake of fresh fish I can do anything.</p>
<p>John Beaulac was not there. The Beaulac baby—my
godson—was “awful sick.”</p>
<p>Later in the day came young Louis to the island to ask for the
loan of some alcohol. The doctor had seen the child, by
chance, as he was passing through the farm on his way to the
lake, and had prescribed a warm bath and an alcohol rub.
Young Louis’ eyes were big with horror. To wash a
sick child was evidently the same thing as killing it
outright. I supplied the alcohol and, gathering up clean
sheets, soft towels, a new washcloth and talcum powder, took
shipping for Loon Lake.</p>
<p>Rose Beaulac sat in the center of a red-hot room, the window
shut, the door shut, every chair, box and square foot of floor
space occupied by a child or a dog, and held the gasping, moaning
baby, despair in her face. One look at its crimson cheeks
and glazed blue <SPAN name="page182"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
182</span>eyes told me that it was an ill child indeed. My
thermometer showed a temperature of a hundred and four when it
came out from the burning little armpit.</p>
<p>John stood beside the woodpile and called me as I left the
house.</p>
<p>“Was the baby very ill? Ought he to send for the
doctor?”</p>
<p>It was “Yes” to both questions.</p>
<p>Then John did some figuring in his mind. His beady black
eyes stopped twinkling, his face grew stern and set. This
has been a hard winter for Jack. The war stopped the export
of mica and the mines have been shut down. Last year was a
wet season when the hay floated in the meadows and the grain
sprouted in the stooks. It has been almost impossible to
make ends meet, but if the child needed the doctor—well, he
must be called and he’d be paid somehow. John left
the decision to me. I must call the doctor if I thought
best.</p>
<p>So away up the lake, three miles to the telephone, I rowed,
and the doctor promised to come the next day.</p>
<p>“Tell John to have a boat at Henderson’s landing
for me, at seven-thirty. I can’t make the fifteen
miles there and back over these <SPAN name="page183"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>roads to-night. Meanwhile keep
up the bathing and the alcohol rubs, and tell Rose to keep that
door open. Don’t forget that. Tell her that
child must have plenty of air”—an injunction that Dr.
LeBaron did not in the least expect to have obeyed when he gave
it; it was merely a part of his general course of education.</p>
<p>How did those eight people manage to breathe in that stifling
room; how could that ill child survive in that foul
atmosphere? I wondered, as I laid my weary body down on my
clean, cool bed. And if I were worn out, what must Rose be,
who had sat for three nights with that tossing, suffering baby in
her arms?</p>
<p>Whether the lake is more beautiful in the early morning or at
sunset, I have never been able to determine. At six
o’clock, as I pushed off from the dock on the blue water,
the thrasher’s liquid song followed the rhythm of the
oars. Out on the open bay the swallows wheeled and dipped
all round the boat, so near that I could have touched their
burnished blue-green backs. On the beaches the sandpipers
ran tipping up and down, their plaintive piping mingling with the
robin’s <SPAN name="page184"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
184</span>song. A gentle breeze roughened the water and
every little ripple that hurried to the shore was tipped with a
winking star.</p>
<p>At Beaulac’s all was in readiness for the doctor.
Rose’s eyes were glazed with sleeplessness, her face lined
with fatigue; but she had found strength to comb and braid her
dark hair, the children’s faces had been washed, and the
baby had been dressed in a little new pink cotton frock.
There was a dishpan full of newly hatched turkeys behind the
stove, for even if one’s child is dying one must try to
save the fowl, and there was a basket of young kittens under the
bed. But Richard, the pet lamb, had been banished to the
meadow and the hounds were tied to the fence. John had gone
for the doctor. Mary was alone with the ill child.
She had done all she could, she could only wait.</p>
<p>“I’m glad you got me his picture,” she said
with a piteous little smile and looking over at a kodak print of
the baby that we had taken some weeks before.
“He’s never been nowheres to have his picture
took. I guess I’ll be glad of that one.”</p>
<p>Far out on the shining bay we saw the boat returning.
There was only one figure in it. <SPAN name="page185"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>John was
coming back alone. The doctor had been stopped by an
accident case; he could not come until evening.
Rose’s lips trembled, but she made no complaint. What
was the life of one baby when there were so many, so many that
needed the doctor?</p>
<p>Back to the island for my midday meal, back to Loon Bay to
meet the doctor. This time there were two figures black
against the evening sky. John was rowing with quick jerks
of the short, straight oars. In the stern sat a bulky shape
digging away with a paddle. Under its weight the upward
pointing bow waved from side to side. Over the gunwale
amidship came a steady stream of water. Mrs. LeBaron, the
doctor’s wife, crouched on the bottom, was bailing away for
life.</p>
<p>“By gol!” said John, in an aside to me, as the
party climbed the hill. “By gol! but the doctor iss a
heavy man. I thought she was over two, three
times.”</p>
<p>Oh, the method of these country doctors! There’s
no talk of “Call me in the night if the change should
come.” No promise: “I’ll see you the
first thing in the morning.” No, Dr. LeBaron only
gave his verdict. The baby had pneumonia. The right
lung was suffused. He <SPAN name="page186"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>was a very ill child, but he might
pull through—no one could tell. And all the time the
doctor’s deft hands were making up powders, counting
tablets, measuring drops. On every package he wrote the day
and the hour the dose was to be given. He set down the
times for baths and nourishment, he told us what symptoms we
might expect. He gave his directions over and over again,
slowly, clearly, waiting for a repetition of his words.
There was no haste, no irritation at our ignorance, only infinite
care, infinite patience. Then he ordered out the children,
the young turkeys and the cats, shook hands with the mother,
stepped into the boat and was rowed away. If the child
lived, we would not need him again; if it died, we were to notify
him at once, and twice a day he wished me to telephone him the
baby’s temperature, respiration, pulse, and a general
account of the progress of the disease. And then when
excitement was at its height, someone broke my thermometer, the
only one in miles; there was no more taking of
temperatures—and the child got well!</p>
<p>The last time that Dr. LeBaron came to Many Islands it was to
treat Harry <SPAN name="page187"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
187</span>Spriggins’ boy, who had cleft his kneecap
straight through with an ax. There was no fire in the
house. The Doctor had to build one and boil a pan clean
before he could sterilize his instruments. There was no one
willing to help him give an anæsthetic, so he had to sew up
that wound while the boy sat and watched him do it.</p>
<p>“How in the world did the child stand it, Doctor?”
I asked.</p>
<p>“Well, it was pretty hard on him,” answered the
doctor. “I told him that I’d thrash him within
an inch of his life if he moved—it was the only
way—and the poor kid gritted his teeth and swore like a
trooper all the time. But the wound healed perfectly,
almost without a scar, and the joint did not stiffen.”</p>
<p>“You would be quite surprised to know how little charity
work I do,” continued the Doctor, giving me a very direct
look from his keen, gray eyes. “There are not many
bad debts on my books. The country people pay remarkably
well, all things considered.”</p>
<p>A quick little smile flits over Mrs. LeBaron’s face at
his words. I imagine she could tell quite another
tale. Doubtless she knows <SPAN name="page188"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>how much of time and strength and
pity is given for which no money can ever pay.</p>
<p>“What do you call charity, Doctor?”</p>
<p>It is not, of course, charity to charge Johnny Bagneau ten
dollars for driving twenty miles through the blinding snow; to
sit, through the long night and half the day, beside the bed
where little John makes his delayed entrance into life; to eat a
breakfast of eggs in the shells and a dinner of potatoes in their
jackets, and to stand outdoors in the bitter cold to eat them,
because even the doctor, inured to filth and foul air, cannot eat
in that poor room.</p>
<p>“No, the Doctor does not work for charity,” the
people tell me. “He gits paid for what he
does.”</p>
<p>Younger men come from the hospitals of Toronto and Montreal
and hang out their signs in Queensport for awhile. They get
a percentage of the town cases. They do not “go
in” for the country practice.</p>
<p>“They young chaps is all very good when there’s
nawthin’ much the matter,” says old Mrs.
Drapeau. “But when it’s anything bad we wants
the old Doctor.”</p>
<p>Yes, that is it. When danger threatens we <SPAN name="page189"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>want the
man we know. He has brought us into the world, he has stood
by us through life’s trouble. It is he who must sit
beside us, steadfast amid the gathering shadows, as the soul
starts forth through the darkness of the long trail, to the land
where there shall be no more night.</p>
<p>These country doctors! Up and down the roads they go, by
night and day, through storm and fair weather, treating
everything, operating for anything, nursing, instructing,
overcoming prejudice, performing miracles of healing despite
incredible difficulties. To meet them is to come face to
face with the eternal realities. To hear them talk is to
listen to a tale that cuts down deep into the beating heart of
life.</p>
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