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"I don't know," Sally replied, "and she doesn't and I think she ought to."
"The definition," remarked the professor coldly, "is to be found in the dictionary, I have no doubt. You might look it up and tell her."
"And so I think," Sally continued, as if he had not spoken, "that mother ought to see a doctor; a doctor that knows about headaches."
"Oh," said the professor, more coldly than before. "So you would like to have a specialist called in; a specialist in headaches."
"I don't know whether that's what you call them," Sally returned bravely. "If it is, then I would."
Her father had turned toward her, but he did not look at her. "Most interesting!" He got a cigarette from the drawer and proceeded to beat out some of the tobacco. "Doctor--er--what's-his-name, from the village, wouldn't do, then?"
"No, he wouldn't." There was just a suspicion of a quiver in Sally's voice. "He doesn't know enough."
"Indeed! You have not communicated your opinion of his knowledge, or his lack of it, to him, I take it?"
Sally shook her head. She could not have spoken, even if the question had called for a reply.
"Do you know what a specialist charges, Sally?"
She shook her head again.
"For taking a case like your mother's, Sally," he said slowly, "which would be nuts to him, I have no doubt, his charge would be more, in a week, than I could pay in ten years."
"It is very important," Sally urged. "It is very important for mother."
The professor rose. "Much as I regret the necessity, I feel obliged to decline." He made her a bow. "No specialists for this family. If your mother feels the need of a physician, let her call Doctor what's-his-name from the village."
Sally turned to go without a word.
"And, Sally," her father added, "be kind enough to tell your mother that important matters at the college require my attention. She is not to be alarmed if I fail to come in my usual train. I may be kept late."
The phrase sounded familiar. It was the old formula which Sally had hoped would not be used again. She went out quietly, feeling responsible. It was absurd, of course, but she could not help it. She meant to find Fox and tell him; but not quite yet. She couldn't bear it yet.
The matters at the college must have been very important, for they--or something--kept Professor Ladue late, as he had seemed to fear; the important matters--or something--must have kept him too late for the last train that night. To be sure, Sally did not know anything about it, at the time. She had not indulged a hope of anything else, and had gone to bed and to sleep as usual. For Sally was a healthy little animal, and she was asleep in a very few minutes after her head had touched the pillow. Her eyes may have been wet. Mrs. Ladue went to bed, too. Her eyes were not wet, but there was an ache in her head and another just above her heart. She may have gone to sleep at once or she may not. It is conceivable that she lay there, with her two aches, until after the last train had got in.
It was the middle of the next forenoon before Sally got a chance to tell Fox about it; and Fox listened, not too sympathetically. That seemed to him to be the best way to treat it. He would have made light of it, even, for Sally was oppressed by the sense of her own responsibility; but Sally would have none of it.
"Don't, Fox, please," she said.
"Well," he replied, "I won't, then. But don't you worry, Sally. We'll have your mother fixed up, all right, yet."
"How?" she asked.
"I haven't decided. But I'm going to bend the whole power of a great mind to the question. When I've found the best way to do it, I'm going to do it. You'll see."
Sally sighed with relief. She had not got beyond the stage of thinking that Fox could do anything that he tried to do. Perhaps he could.
They were down by the gate, Fox leaning upon it and Sally standing on a bar and swinging it gently. Occasionally she looked down the road.
"Here comes father," she said suddenly, in a low voice.
"Stay where you are, Sally." Fox checked her impulse to run.
The professor was walking fast and he came in at the gate almost immediately. Sally had dismounted. He looked annoyed and would have pa.s.sed without a word.
"Good-morning," said Fox cheerfully.
The professor turned, giving Fox one of his smiles which was not a smile at all. If the professor had chanced to turn one of those smiles upon a too confiding dog, the dog would have put his tail between his legs and run. Vivisection came after.
"Good-morning," said the professor acidly. "I shall be obliged to delay our session for an hour."
"Very well, sir, whenever it is convenient for you." And Fox smiled cheerfully again.
The professor turned once more. His eyes were bloodshot, he was unshaven, and--well, tousled. In short, the professor looked as if he had been sitting up all night. He had.
"You see," said Sally solemnly. Her father was out of hearing, as may be supposed.
CHAPTER VIII
Professor Ladue had had a relapse. There was no doubt about it. It was rather serious, too, as relapses are apt to be; but what could be expected? He had been good for a long time, a very long time for him.
It was even an unreasonably long time for him, as had occurred to him, you will remember, in the course of his conversation with Sally, and n.o.body had any right to expect more. What Mrs. Ladue and her daughter Sally thought they expected was really what they hoped. They did not expect it, although they thought that they did; and the proof is that, when the first relapse happened, they were not surprised. They were deeply discouraged. The future looked pretty black to Sally as she swung there on the gate. It looked blacker yet when the professor did it twice again in one month. That was in March. But the worst was to come. It was lucky that Sally did not know it. It is always lucky that we do not know, at one blow, all that is to happen to us. Our courage might not survive that blow. Instead, it has a chance to grow with what it feeds upon.
So Sally went her daily round as cheerfully as she could. That was not any too cheerfully, and her unexpected chuckles became as rare as roses in December. Even her smiles seemed to be reserved for her mother and to be tender rather than merry. She watched the progress of her mother's disease, whatever it was, with solicitude and anxiety, although she tried desperately hard not to show her mother how anxious she was.
Mrs. Ladue's progress was very slow; imperceptible, from day to day, and she had her ups and downs. It was only when she could look back for a month or more that Sally was able to say to herself, with any certainty, that her mother was worse--that the downs had it. But always, when Sally could look back and compare, she had to confess to herself that that was so. The headaches were no more frequent nor did they seem to be harder to bear; but her mother seemed--it was a struggle for Sally to have to acknowledge it, even to herself--her mother seemed to be growing stupid. Her intelligence seemed to be diminishing. What was Fox thinking of, to let that happen?
When this question presented itself, Sally was again swinging moodily upon the gate, regarding the muddy road that stretched out before her.
Charlie was playing somewhere behind her, equipped with rubber boots and a heavy coat. It is to be feared that Sally had forgotten Charlie.
It was not her habit to forget Charlie. And it is to be feared that she was forgetting that the last day of March had come and that it was warm and springlike, and that there were a number of birds about. It was not her habit to forget any of those things either, especially the birds. There was a flash of blue under a tree near by and, a few seconds later, a clear song rang out. Charlie stopped his play and looked, but Sally did not see the blue wings nor the ruddy breast nor did she seem to hear the song.
That question had brought her up short. She stopped her rhythmic swinging to and fro.
"I'll ask him," she said. Her faith in Fox was absolute.
She opened the gate quickly, and started to run.
There was a roar from Charlie. "Sally! Where you goin'? Wait for me! I want to go, too. I'm awful hot. Can't I take off my coat? An' these boots are hot. I want to take 'em off."
Sally sighed and waited. "I'm afraid I forgot you, Charlie. Take off your coat, if you're too hot, and leave it by the gate."
Charlie had the overcoat off and he dropped it by the side of the footpath.
"Not there, Charlie," Sally said impatiently. "Inside the gate. We don't leave overcoats by the side of the road."