“Oh, don’t be giving yourself up like that,” said the Doctor, cheerily; “we won’t let you die yet awhile.”
“I won’t die,” she answered, gravely, “till the same day that Laurence died: the 13th of September. There’s no fear of me till then.”
She looked tired, and her visitors left, the Doctor telling his new acquaintance as they walked down the lane what a strong, bright girl this had been till a year ago, when her brother had died of consumption. From that day her health had begun to fail, the winter had brought a cough, and Easter had found her kept to her bed. It was a hopeless case, he thought, though she might linger for a time.
“Indeed, and she’s a loss to us,” put in old Mrs. Capel, who had now joined them, having returned from her pursuit of the predatory pig. “She was a great one for slavin’, and as strong as any girl on the estate, but she did be frettin’ greatly after her brother, and then she got cold out of her little boots that let in the water, and there she’s lying now, and couldn’t get up if all Ireland was thrusting for it.”
The mist had now turned to definite rain, and Louise Eden accepted “a lift” on the Doctor’s car, as he had to pass her gate in going home. His shyness soon wore off as the girl talked to him with complete ease and simplicity, first of some of his poor patients, then of herself and her interest in them.
She was half-Irish, she said, her mother having come from this very West Country, but she had lost both her parents early and been brought up at school and with English relatives. Lately her brother, or rather step-brother, having been made an R.M. and appointed to the Cloon district, had asked her to live with him, and this she was but too happy to do. She had always longed to give her life to the poor and especially the Irish poor, of whose wants she had heard so much. She had even thought of becoming a deaconess, but her friends would not hear of it, and she had been obliged to submit herself to their conventional suburban life. “But here at last,” she said, “I find my hands full and my heart also. These people welcome me so warmly and need so much, the whole day is filled with work for them; and now that you have come, Dr. Quin,” she added, smiling at him, “I can do so much more, for you will tell me how to work under you and to nurse your patients back to health again.”
It was almost dark when they came to the gate of Inagh, the house usually tenanted by the Resident Magistrate of the day, and here Louise Eden took leave of her new acquaintance, again giving him her hand in its little wet glove. The Doctor watched her as she ran lightly towards the house. She wore a grey hat and cloak, and the rough madder-dyed skirt of the peasant women of the district. None of the “young ladies” he had hitherto met would have deigned to appear in one of these fleecy crimson garments, so becoming to its present wearer. She turned and waved her hand at the corner of the drive, and the Doctor having gazed a moment longer into the grey mist that shrouded her, went on his journey home.