PAGE 8
"Seth"
by
“Ay,” put in Mrs. Janner in a fretful wail, “fur they say as it’s worse i’ these parts than it is i’ England–th’ heat mak’s it worse–an’ here we are i’ th’ midst o’ th’ summer-toime, an’ theer’s no knowin’ wheer it’ll end. I wish tha’d takken my advice, Janner, an’ stayed i’ Lancashire. Ay, I wish we wur safe at home. Better less wage an’ more safety. Yo’d niwer ha’ coom if yo’d listened to me.”
“Howd thy tongue, mother,” said Bess, but the words were not ungently spoken, notwithstanding their bluntness. “Dunnot let us mak’ it worse than it need be. Seth, lad, eat thy breakfast.”
But there was little breakfast eaten. The fact was, that at the first spreading of the report a panic had seized upon the settlement, and Janner and his wife were by no means the least influenced by it A stolidly stubborn courage upheld Bess, but even she was subdued and somewhat awed.
“I niwer heerd much about th’ cholera,” Seth said to her after breakfast. “Is this here true, this as thy feyther says?”
“I dunnot know fur sure,” Bess answered gravely, “but it’s bad enow.”
“Coom out wi’ me into th’ fresh air,” said the lad, laying his hand upon her sleeve: “I mun say a word or so to thee.” And they went out together.
There was no work done in the mine that day. Two of three new cases broke out, and the terror spread itself and grew stronger. In fact, Black Creek scarcely comported itself as stoically as might have been expected. A messenger was dispatched to the nearest town for a doctor, and his arrival by the night train was awaited with excited impatience.
When he came, however, the matter became worse. He had bad news to tell himself. The epidemic had broken out in the town he had left, and great fears were entertained by its inhabitants. “If you had not been so entirely thrown on your own resources,” he said, “I could not have come.”
A heavy enough responsibility rested upon his shoulders during the next few weeks. He had little help from the settlement. Those who were un-stricken looked on at the progress of the disease with helpless fear: few indeed escaped a slight attack, and those who did were scarcely more useful than his patients. In the whole place he found only two reliable and unterrified assistants.
His first visit was to a small farm-house round the foot of the mountain and a short distance from the mine. There he found the family huddled in a back room like a flock of frightened sheep, and in the only chamber a handsome, bright-haired young fellow lying, upon the bed with a pinched and ominous look upon his comely face. The only person with him was a lad roughly clad in miner’s clothes–a lad who stood by chafing his hands, and who turned desperate eyes to the door when it opened. “Yo’re too late, mester,” he said–“yo’re too late.”
But young as he was–and he was a very young man–the doctor had presence of mind and energy, and he flung his whole soul and strength into the case. The beauty and solitariness of his patient roused his sympathy almost as if it had been the beauty of a woman; he felt drawn toward the stalwart, helpless young figure lying upon the humble couch in such apparent utter loneliness. He did not count much upon the lad at first–he seemed too much bewildered and shaken–but it was not long before he changed his mind. “You are getting over your fear,” he said.
“It wasna fear, mester,” was the answer he received; “or at least it wasna fear for mysen’.”
“What is your name?”
“Seth Ray nor, mester. Him an’ me,” with a gesture toward the bed, “comn from th’ same place. Th’ cholera couldna fear me fro’ him–nor nowt else if he wur i’ need.”
So it was Seth Raynor who watched by the bedside, and labored with loving care and a patience which knew no weariness, until the worst was over and Langley was among the convalescent.