PAGE 21
A Difficult Case
by
The neglect in all was evidently too recent to suggest any supposition but that of the master’s temporary absence, and Ewbert went to the threshold to look for his coming from the sheds or the barn. But these were all fast shut, and there was no sign of Hilbrook anywhere. Ewbert turned back into the room again, and saw the door of the old man’s little bedroom standing slightly ajar. With a chill of apprehension he pushed it open, and he could not have experienced a more disagreeable effect if the dark fear in his mind had been realized than he did to see Hilbrook lying in his bed alive and awake. His face showed like a fine mask above the sheet, and his long, narrow hands rested on the covering across his breast. His eyes met those of Ewbert not only without surprise, but without any apparent emotion.
“Why, Mr. Hilbrook,” said the minister, “are you sick?”
“No, I am first-rate,” the old man answered.
It was on the point of the minister’s tongue to ask him, “Then what in the world are you doing in bed?” but he substituted the less authoritative suggestion, “I am afraid I disturbed you–that I woke you out of a nap. But I found the door open and the hens inside, and I ventured to come in”–
Hilbrook replied calmly, “I heard you; I wa’n’t asleep.”
“Oh,” said Ewbert, apologetically, and he did not know quite what to do; he had an aimless wish for his wife, as if she would have known what to do. In her absence he decided to shut the door against the hens, who were returning adventurously to the threshold, and then he asked, “Is there something I can do for you? Make a fire for you to get up by”–
“I ha’n’t got any call to get up,” said Hilbrook; and, after giving Ewbert time to make the best of this declaration, he asked abruptly, “What was that you said about my wantin’ to be alive enough to know I was dead?”
“The consciousness of unconsciousness?”
“Ah!” the old man assented, as with satisfaction in having got the notion right; and then he added, with a certain defiance: “There ain’t anything in that. I got to thinking it over, when you was gone, and the whole thing went to pieces. That idea don’t prove anything at all, and all that we worked out of it had to go with it.”
“Well,” the minister returned, with an assumption of cosiness in his tone which he did not feel, and feigning to make himself easy in the hard kitchen chair which he pulled up to the door of Hilbrook’s room, “let’s see if we can’t put that notion together again.”
“You can, if you want to,” said the old man, dryly “I got no interest in it any more; ‘twa’n’t nothing but a metaphysical toy, anyway.” He turned his head apathetically on the pillow, and no longer faced his visitor, who found it impossible in the conditions of tacit dismissal to philosophize further.
“I was sorry,” Ewbert began, “not to be able to speak with you after church, the other day. There were so many people”–
“That’s all right,” said Hilbrook unresentfully. “I hadn’t anything to say, in particular.”
“But I had,” the minister persisted. “I thought a great deal about you when I was away, and I went over our talks in my own mind a great many times. The more I thought about them, the more I believed that we had felt our way to some important truth in the matter. I don’t say final truth, for I don’t suppose that we shall ever reach that in this life.”
“Very likely,” Hilbrook returned, with his face to the wall. “I don’t see as it makes any difference; or if it does, I don’t care for it.”
Something occurred to Ewbert which seemed to him of more immediate usefulness than the psychological question. “Couldn’t I get you something to eat, Mr. Hilbrook? If you haven’t had any breakfast to-day, you must be hungry.”