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"All right," said the second.
A boy pulled Allbright by the sleeve. "Say, I'll go for the doc," he cried, eagerly. He was enjoying the situation keenly.
"Well," replied Allbright, "be quick about it. Tell him there's a man badly hurt at my house."
The boy sped like a rocket, and three more with him. They all yelled as they ran. They were street gamins of the better cla.s.s, and were both sympathetic and entertained. They lived in a tenement-house near Allbright, and knew him quite well by sight.
Meantime the two policemen carried Carroll the short distance to William Allbright's house. He was quite unconscious, and it was an undertaking of considerable difficulty to carry him up the stairs, since the Allbrights lived in the second story.
The clerk in the department store, and his mother, who lived on the first floor, came to their door in undress and offered their hospitality, but Mr. Allbright declined their aid.
"No," he said. "I know him. It is Mr. Carroll. He had better be taken up to my rooms."
When at last they laid the unconscious man on Allbright's bed, which his sister, pale, and yet with a collectedness under such surprising circ.u.mstances which spoke well for her, had opened, the policeman who was not an athlete, and was, in fact, too stout, wiped his forehead and said, "Gee."
The other remained looking at the injured man soberly.
"Guess he's hurted pretty bad," he remarked again.
"You bet," said the first. "Gee!"
Allbright's sister came with the camphor-bottle, which she kept in a sort of folk-lore fashion, as her mother had used to do in the country. Allbright brought the whiskey, of which he kept a small supply in the house in case of dire need, and stood over Carroll with that and a teaspoon, with a vague idea of trying to insinuate a few drops into his mouth.
The two policemen clamped heavily down-stairs, agreeing that they would remain until the doctor came, and see if it was to be the hospital after all.
"Guess he's hurted pretty bad," remarked the handsome policeman for the third time.
The doctor came quickly, almost on a run. He lived within a block, and had not a large practice. He was attended by a large throng of boys, for the three had served as a nucleus for many more. He turned around to them with an imperative gesture as he entered the house door.
"Now you scatter," said he. He was a fair man, but he had at once an appeal of good-fellowship and a certain force of character. Besides, there were the two policemen hovering near. The boys withdrew and remained watching in the dark shadows cast by an opposite house. In case the injured man was carried to the hospital, and the ambulance should come, they could not afford to miss that. They had not so many pleasures in life.
The doctor mounted the stairs; he had been there before, for Allbright's sister was more or less of an invalid, and he at once abetted Allbright's purpose of the few drops of stimulant on the teaspoon, which the patient swallowed with a pathetic, gulping pa.s.siveness like a baby's.
"He swallows all right," remarked Allbright's sister, in an agitated voice. She stood aloof, waving the camphor-bottle; her eyes were dilated, and her face had a pale, gaping look.
"You go out in the other room and stay there," said the doctor to her, with the authority which a hysterical woman defers to and adores.
Allbright's sister was a very good woman, but she had sometimes imagined, then directly driven the imagination from her with a spiritual scourge like a monk of old, what might have happened if the doctor were not already married.
Carroll's forehead was dripping with camphor, and there was danger should he open his eyes. The doctor wiped the pale forehead gently and spoke to him.
"Well, you had quite a hard fall, sir," he said, in a loud, cheerful voice, and directly Carroll answered, like a somnambulist:
"Yes, quite a fall."
Then he seemed to lapse again into unconsciousness. The doctor and Allbright remained working over him, but it was within fifteen minutes before the time when the last train for Banbridge was due to leave New York that he made the first absolutely conscious motion.
"He is feeling for his watch," said Allbright, in an agitated whisper. His wits were sharpened with regard to Carroll's watch.
Carroll's coat and vest had been removed, and were hanging over a chair. Allbright at once got the dollar watch from its pocket and carried it over to the sick man. "Here is your watch, Mr. Carroll,"
he said, and his voice was full of both respectful and tender inflections.
A sob was distinctly heard from Allbright's sister out in the sitting-room. The woman from down-stairs, the department clerk's mother, was now with her.
"He wants to see if his watch is safe, poor man," said she, in a tearful voice, and Allbright's sister whimpered again.
"It's a wonder some of them kids didn't swipe it," said the down-stairs woman, and Allbright's sister was conscious of a distinct thrill of disgust in the midst of her excitement and pity. She was of a superior sort to the down-stairs woman, and she often told her brother she could not get used to folks using such language.
Poor Carroll was looking dimly at his watch, and Allbright at once divined that he could not distinguish the time without his eye-gla.s.ses. He therefore leaned over him--his own spectacles were on his nose--and told him the time.
"It's almost seventeen minutes past twelve, Mr. Carroll," he said.
Carroll made a movement to rise, then subsided with a groan. "Where am I?" he inquired, feebly, with a bewildered stare around the strange room. Directly opposite him hung a large crayon portrait of Allbright's father, a handsome man with a reverend beard like a prophet, and his eyes became riveted upon that.
"You are in my house, Mr. Carroll," said Allbright, with a tender, caressing motion of his hand towards him, like a woman.
"You had a fall on the ice, Mr. Carroll," said the physician, in a tone of soothing explanation, "but you will soon be as good as new."
"How far up-town?" inquired Carroll, still gazing at the portrait, which had an odd hardness of outline, and appeared almost as if carved out of wood.
"You are at One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Street," replied Allbright.
"You are at my house, Mr. Carroll. You fell right out here, and I had you carried in here."
Carroll tried again to rise, and made a despairing gasp. "Oh, my G.o.d!" he said. "I have lost the last train out. There isn't time to get down to the ferry, and there is that poor child all alone there, and she won't know--"
"You can send a telegram," suggested the doctor. "Now, Mr. Carroll, don't get excited."
"She will be all right," said Allbright.
"What is it?" asked the down-stairs woman, coming to the door.
"His daughter is all alone in the house, I guess, and he's worried about her," explained Allbright.
"There ain't nothin' goin' to eat her, if she is, is there?" inquired the down-stairs woman.
"I'll run with a telegram," said Allbright, eagerly, to the doctor.
But at that moment Carroll lapsed into unconsciousness. The excitement had been too much for him. He lay as if asleep.
"Where does he live?" asked the doctor, of Allbright.
"I don't know exactly. Somewhere out on the Pennsylvania Railroad."
"You don't know?" repeated the doctor, with a faint accent of surprise.
Allbright shook his head.
"You were book-keeper in his office?"