What measure of belief her explanation
of Evelina’s return obtained in the small circle
of her friends Ann Eliza did not pause to enquire.
Though she could not remember ever having told a lie
before, she adhered with rigid tenacity to the consequences
of her first lapse from truth, and fortified her original
statement with additional details whenever a questioner
sought to take her unawares.
But other and more serious burdens
lay on her startled conscience. For the first
time in her life she dimly faced the awful problem
of the inutility of self-sacrifice. Hitherto
she had never thought of questioning the inherited
principles which had guided her life. Self-effacement
for the good of others had always seemed to her both
natural and necessary; but then she had taken it for
granted that it implied the securing of that good.
Now she perceived that to refuse the gifts of life
does not ensure their transmission to those for whom
they have been surrendered; and her familiar heaven
was unpeopled. She felt she could no longer trust
in the goodness of God, and there was only a black
abyss above the roof of Bunner Sisters.
But there was little time to brood
upon such problems. The care of Evelina filled
Ann Eliza’s days and nights. The hastily
summoned doctor had pronounced her to be suffering
from pneumonia, and under his care the first stress
of the disease was relieved. But her recovery
was only partial, and long after the doctor’s
visits had ceased she continued to lie in bed, too
weak to move, and seemingly indifferent to everything
about her.
At length one evening, about six weeks
after her return, she said to her sister: “I
don’t feel’s if I’d ever get up again.”
Ann Eliza turned from the kettle she
was placing on the stove. She was startled by
the echo the words woke in her own breast.
“Don’t you talk like that,
Evelina! I guess you’re on’y tired
out—and disheartened.”
“Yes, I’m disheartened,” Evelina
murmured.
A few months earlier Ann Eliza would
have met the confession with a word of pious admonition;
now she accepted it in silence.
“Maybe you’ll brighten
up when your cough gets better,” she suggested.
“Yes—or my cough’ll
get better when I brighten up,” Evelina retorted
with a touch of her old tartness.
“Does your cough keep on hurting you jest as
much?”
“I don’t see’s there’s much
difference.”
“Well, I guess I’ll get
the doctor to come round again,” Ann Eliza said,
trying for the matter-of-course tone in which one might
speak of sending for the plumber or the gas-fitter.
“It ain’t any use sending
for the doctor—and who’s going to
pay him?”
“I am,” answered the elder
sister. “Here’s your tea, and a
mite of toast. Don’t that tempt you?”
Already, in the watches of the night,
Ann Eliza had been tormented by that same question—who
was to pay the doctor?—and a few days before
she had temporarily silenced it by borrowing twenty
dollars of Miss Mellins. The transaction had
cost her one of the bitterest struggles of her life.
She had never borrowed a penny of any one before,
and the possibility of having to do so had always
been classed in her mind among those shameful extremities
to which Providence does not let decent people come.
But nowadays she no longer believed in the personal
supervision of Providence; and had she been compelled
to steal the money instead of borrowing it, she would
have felt that her conscience was the only tribunal
before which she had to answer. Nevertheless,
the actual humiliation of having to ask for the money
was no less bitter; and she could hardly hope that
Miss Mellins would view the case with the same detachment
as herself. Miss Mellins was very kind; but she
not unnaturally felt that her kindness should be rewarded
by according her the right to ask questions; and bit
by bit Ann Eliza saw Evelina’s miserable secret
slipping into the dress-maker’s possession.
When the doctor came she left him
alone with Evelina, busying herself in the shop that
she might have an opportunity of seeing him alone
on his way out. To steady herself she began to
sort a trayful of buttons, and when the doctor appeared
she was reciting under her breath: “Twenty-four
horn, two and a half cards fancy pearl . . .”
She saw at once that his look was grave.
He sat down on the chair beside the
counter, and her mind travelled miles before he spoke.
“Miss Bunner, the best thing
you can do is to let me get a bed for your sister
at St. Luke’s.”
“The hospital?”
“Come now, you’re above
that sort of prejudice, aren’t you?”
The doctor spoke in the tone of one who coaxes a spoiled
child. “I know how devoted you are—but
Mrs. Ramy can be much better cared for there than
here. You really haven’t time to look after
her and attend to your business as well. There’ll
be no expense, you understand—”
Ann Eliza made no answer. “You
think my sister’s going to be sick a good while,
then?” she asked.
“Well, yes—possibly.”
“You think she’s very sick?”
“Well, yes. She’s very sick.”
His face had grown still graver; he
sat there as though he had never known what it was
to hurry.
Ann Eliza continued to separate the
pearl and horn buttons. Suddenly she lifted
her eyes and looked at him. “Is she going
to die?”
The doctor laid a kindly hand on hers.
“We never say that, Miss Bunner. Human
skill works wonders—and at the hospital
Mrs. Ramy would have every chance.”
“What is it? What’s she dying of?”
The doctor hesitated, seeking to substitute
a popular phrase for the scientific terminology which
rose to his lips.
“I want to know,” Ann Eliza persisted.
“Yes, of course; I understand.
Well, your sister has had a hard time lately, and
there is a complication of causes, resulting in consumption—rapid
consumption. At the hospital—”
“I’ll keep her here,” said Ann Eliza
quietly.
After the doctor had gone she went
on for some time sorting the buttons; then she slipped
the tray into its place on a shelf behind the counter
and went into the back room. She found Evelina
propped upright against the pillows, a flush of agitation
on her cheeks. Ann Eliza pulled up the shawl
which had slipped from her sister’s shoulders.
“How long you’ve been! What’s
he been saying?”
“Oh, he went long ago—he
on’y stopped to give me a prescription.
I was sorting out that tray of buttons. Miss
Mellins’s girl got them all mixed up.”
She felt Evelina’s eyes upon her.
“He must have said something: what was
it?”
“Why, he said you’d have
to be careful—and stay in bed—and
take this new medicine he’s given you.”
“Did he say I was going to get well?”
“Why, Evelina!”
“What’s the use, Ann Eliza?
You can’t deceive me. I’ve just
been up to look at myself in the glass; and I saw plenty
of ’em in the hospital that looked like me.
They didn’t get well, and I ain’t going
to.” Her head dropped back. “It
don’t much matter— I’m about
tired. On’y there’s one thing—Ann
Eliza—”
The elder sister drew near to the bed.
“There’s one thing I ain’t
told you. I didn’t want to tell you yet
because I was afraid you might be sorry—but
if he says I’m going to die I’ve got to
say it.” She stopped to cough, and to Ann
Eliza it now seemed as though every cough struck a
minute from the hours remaining to her.
“Don’t talk now—you’re
tired.”
“I’ll be tireder to-morrow,
I guess. And I want you should know. Sit
down close to me—there.”
Ann Eliza sat down in silence, stroking her shrunken
hand.
“I’m a Roman Catholic, Ann Eliza.”
“Evelina—oh, Evelina Bunner!
A Roman Catholic—you?
Oh, Evelina, did he make you?”
Evelina shook her head. “I
guess he didn’t have no religion; he never spoke
of it. But you see Mrs. Hochmuller was a Catholic,
and so when I was sick she got the doctor to send me
to a Roman Catholic hospital, and the sisters was
so good to me there—and the priest used
to come and talk to me; and the things he said kep’
me from going crazy. He seemed to make everything
easier.”
“Oh, sister, how could you?”
Ann Eliza wailed. She knew little of the Catholic
religion except that “Papists” believed
in it—in itself a sufficient indictment.
Her spiritual rebellion had not freed her from the
formal part of her religious belief, and apostasy
had always seemed to her one of the sins from which
the pure in mind avert their thoughts.
“And then when the baby was
born,” Evelina continued, “he christened
it right away, so it could go to heaven; and after
that, you see, I had to be a Catholic.”
“I don’t see—”
“Don’t I have to be where
the baby is? I couldn’t ever ha’
gone there if I hadn’t been made a Catholic.
Don’t you understand that?”
Ann Eliza sat speechless, drawing
her hand away. Once more she found herself shut
out of Evelina’s heart, an exile from her closest
affections.
“I’ve got to go where
the baby is,” Evelina feverishly insisted.
Ann Eliza could think of nothing to
say; she could only feel that Evelina was dying, and
dying as a stranger in her arms. Ramy and the
day-old baby had parted her forever from her sister.
Evelina began again. “If
I get worse I want you to send for a priest.
Miss Mellins’ll know where to send—she’s
got an aunt that’s a Catholic. Promise
me faithful you will.”
“I promise,” said Ann Eliza.
After that they spoke no more of the
matter; but Ann Eliza now understood that the little
black bag about her sister’s neck, which she
had innocently taken for a memento of Ramy, was some
kind of sacrilegious amulet, and her fingers shrank
from its contact when she bathed and dressed Evelina.
It seemed to her the diabolical instrument of their
estrangement.