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The Resurrection Of Alta
by
“‘It’s for God’s sake. I am nothing. It will all come in His own good time.’
“Then I knew the spirit that kept him to his work. He went over his visit to me. How he had hoped, and then how his hopes were dashed to the ground. Oh, dear Lord, had I known what it all meant to that sensitive, saintly nature, I would have sold my ring and cross to give him what he needed. But my words seemed to have broken him and he came home to die. The night of his return he spent before the altar in his log church, and, Saints of Heaven, how he prayed! When I heard his poor, dry lips whisper over the prayer once more I bowed my head on the coverlet and cried as only a child can cry–and I was only a child at that minute in spite of my white hair and wrinkles. He had offered a supreme sacrifice–his life. I gleaned from his prayers that his parents had done him the one favor of keeping up his insurance and that he had made it over to his church. So he wanted to die at his post and piteously begged God to take him. For his death he knew would give Alta a church. He seemed penetrated with the idea that alive he was useless, but that his death meant the resurrection of Alta. When I heard that same expression used so often to-day I lived over again the whole story of that night in the little vestry. All this time he had been picking the coverlet, and his hands seemed, during the pauses, to be holding the paten as if he were gathering up the minute particles from the corporal. At last his hand found mine. He clung to it, and just an instant his eyes looked at me with reason in them. He smiled, and murmured, ‘It is all right, now, Bishop.’ I heard a sob back of me where the boy stood, and the old woman was praying. He was trying to speak again, and I caught the words, ‘God’s sake–I am nothing–His good time.’ Then he was still, just as the morning sun broke through the windows.
“That minute, Reverend Fathers, began the resurrection of Alta. The old woman told me how it happened. He was twenty-five miles away attending one of his missions when the blizzard was at its height. McDermott fell sick and a telegram was sent for the priest–the last message before the wires came down. Father Belmond started to drive through the storm back to Alta. He succeeded in reaching McDermott’s bedside and gave him the last Sacraments. He did not break down himself until he returned to the vestry, but for twenty-four hours he tossed in fever before they found him.
“McDermott grew better. He sent for me when he heard I was in town. The first question he asked was: ‘Is he dead?’ I told McDermott the story just as I am telling you. ‘God forgive me,’ said the sick man, ‘that priest died for me. When he came here I ordered him out of my office, yet when they told him I was sick he drove through the storm for my sake. He believed in the worth of a soul, and he himself was the noblest soul that Alta ever had.’
“I said nothing. Somebody better than a mere bishop was talking to McDermott, and I, His minister, was silent in His presence. ‘Bishop,’ said McDermott, after long thought, ‘I never really believed until now; I’m sorry that it took a man’s life to bring back the Faith of my fathers. Send us a priest to Alta–one who can do things: one after the stamp of the saint in the vestry. I’ll be his friend and together we will carry on the work he began. I’ll see him through if God spares me.’
“Dear Fathers, it is needless to say what I did.
“Father Broidy, on this happy day I have not re-echoed the praises that have been showered upon you as much as perhaps I might have done, because I reserved for you a praise that is higher than all of them. I believed when I sent you here that you were of his stamp. You have done your duty and you have done it well. I am not ungrateful and I shall not forget. But your best praise from me is, that I firmly believe that you, under like circumstances, would also have willingly given your life for the resurrection of Alta.”