Senator North had been formally invited
by Mrs. Madison for dinner that evening, and Betty,
who had parted from him just seven hours before, restrained
an impulse to run down the terrace as his boat made
the landing. Emory and Harriet were on the veranda,
however, and she managed to look stately and more
or less indifferent at the head of the steps.
There were pillars and vines on either side of her,
and bunches of purple wistaria hung above her head.
It was a picturesque frame for a picturesque figure
in white, and a kindly consideration for Senator North’s
highly trained and exacting eye kept her immovable
for nearly five minutes. As he reached the steps,
however, self-consciousness suddenly possessed her
and she started precipitately to meet him. She
wore slippers with high Louis Quinze heels. One
caught in a loosened strand of the mat. Her other
foot went too far. She made a desperate effort
to reach the next step, and fell down the whole flight
with one unsupported ankle twisted under her.
For a moment the pain was so intense
she hardly was aware that Senator North had his arm
about her shoulders while Emory was straightening
her out. Harriet was screaming frantically.
She gave a sharp scream herself as Emory touched her
ankle, but repressed a second as she heard her mother’s
voice.
Mrs. Madison stood in the doorway
with more amazement than alarm on her face.
“Betty?” she cried.
“Nothing can have happened to Betty! Why,
she has not even had a doctor since she was six years
old.”
“It’s nothing but a sprained
ankle,” said Emory. “For heaven’s
sake, keep quiet, Harriet,” he added impatiently,
“and go and get some hot water. Let’s
get her into the house.”
Betty by this time was laughing hysterically.
Her ankle felt like a hot pincushion, and the unaccustomed
experience of pain, combined with Harriet’s
shrieks, delivered with a strong darky accent, and
her mother’s attitude of disapproval, assaulted
her nerves.
When they had carried her in and put
her foot into a bucket of hot water, she forgot them
completely, and while her mother fanned her and Senator
North forced her to swallow brandy, she felt that all
the intensity of life’s emotions was circumferenced
by a wooden bucket. But when they had carefully
extended her on the sofas and Emory, who had a farmer’s
experience with broken bones, announced his intention
of examining her ankle at once, Betty with remarkable
presence of mind asked Senator North to hold her hand.
This he did with a firmness which fortified her during
the painful ordeal, and Mrs. Madison was not terrified
by so much as a moan.
“You have pluck!” exclaimed
Senator North when Emory, after much prodding, had
announced that it was only a sprain. “You
have splendid courage.”
Emory assured her that she was magnificent,
and Betty felt so proud of herself that she had no
desire to undo the accident.
In the days that followed, although
she suffered considerable pain, she enjoyed herself
thoroughly. It was her first experience of being
“fussed over,” as she expressed it.
She never had had so much as a headache, no one within
her memory had asked her how she felt, and she had
regarded her mother as the centre of the medical universe.
Now a clever and sympathetic doctor came over every
day from the hotel and felt her pulse, and intimated
that she was his most important patient. Mrs.
Madison insisted upon bathing her head, Emory and Harriet
treated her like a sovereign whose every wish must
be anticipated, even the servants managed to pass
the door of her sitting-room a dozen times a day.
Senator North came over every morning and sat by her
couch of many rose-coloured pillows; and not only
looked tender and anxious, but suggested that the
statesman within him was dead.
“It is hard on you, though,”
she murmured one day, when they happened to be alone
for a few moments. “Two invalids are more
than one man’s portion. And no one ever
enjoyed the outdoor life as you do.”
“This room is full of sunshine
and fresh air, and I came up here to be with you.
I don’t know but what I am heartless enough to
enjoy seeing such an imperious and insolently healthy
person helpless for a time, and to be able to wait
on her.”
“I feel as if the entire order
of the universe had been reversed.”
“It will do you good. I
hope you will have every variety of pleasure at least
once in your life.”
“You are laughing at me—but
as I am a truthful person I will confide to you that
I almost hate the idea of being well again.”
“Of course you do. And
as for the real invalids they enjoy themselves thoroughly.
The great compensation law is blessed or cursed, whichever
way you choose to look at it.”
“I wonder if you had happened
to be unmarried, what price we would have had to pay.”
“God knows. The compensation
law is the most immutable of all the fates.”
“I have most of the gifts of
life,—good looks, wealth, position, brains,
and the power of making people like me. So I am
not permitted to have the best of all. If I could,
I wonder which of the others I’d lose.
Probably we’d have an accident on our wedding
journey, which would reduce my nerves to such a state
that I’d be irritable for the rest of my life
and lose my good looks and power to make you happy.
It’s a queer world.”
He made no reply.
“What are you thinking of?” she asked,
meeting his eyes.
“That you are not to become
anything so commonplace as a pessimist. Get everything
out of the present that is offered you and give no
thought to the future. What is it?” he added
tenderly, as the blood came into her cheeks and she
knit her brows.
“I moved my ankle and it hurt
me so!” She moved her hand at the same time,
and he took it, and held it until her brows relaxed,
which was not for some time.
The best of women are frauds.
Betty made that ankle the pivot of her circle for
the rest of the summer. When she wanted to see
Senator North look tender and worried, she puckered
her brows and sighed. When she felt the promptings
of her newly acquired desire to be “fussed over,”
she dropped suddenly upon a couch and demanded a cushion
for her foot, or asked to be assisted to a hammock.
She often laughed at herself; but the new experience
was very sweet, and she wondered over Life’s
odd and unexpected sources of pleasure.