My Young Alcides eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 361 pages of information about My Young Alcides.

My Young Alcides eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 361 pages of information about My Young Alcides.

In the early morning, Dermot, quite as fearless, and unwilling that anyone should do or dare more than himself, had gone alone to make the same attempt, but no sooner did the mare find him beside her, than she seized him by the shoulder with her teeth, threw him down, and kicked and trampled on him.  None of the grooms could succeed in rescuing him, and it was only when Eustace’s cry had summoned Harold, that, grasping the mare’s halter and forcing her back with his arm of iron, he made it possible for Eustace and a groom to drag out poor Dermot’s senseless form, in a state that at first appeared to be death itself.  For several days his condition was so extremely precarious, that Harold never once left him till his mother arrived, and even after that was his most effective nurse.  He sent me a message, in Viola’s letter, that he had not had a moment to write, and hoped I had not been too anxious.

After this, Viola wrote every day, and told of gradual improvement in her brother, and at last how he had been lifted to the sofa, and mamma hoped in a fortnight or three weeks he might be able to be taken home.  By the next post came a note from Harold, saying he could be spared, and was coming home, and that very evening he walked into the house, and was welcomed by Dora with shrieks of ecstatic joy.

He said Dermot was better, but he looked worn, and had the indefinable expression of pain which made me sure that something had gone wrong, and presently I found out that the bite in the shoulder was a very bad business, still causing much suffering, but that the most serious matter was, that a kick in the side had renewed the damage left by the old Alma bullet, and that great care would be needed all the winter.  But Harold seemed more reluctant to open his mouth than ever, and only, by most diligent pumping, did Mrs. Alison get out of him what doctors they had called in, and whether they had used all the recipes for wounds and bruises that she had entrusted to me to be sent, and which had for the most part remained in my blotting-book.

The next morning, to my grief and distress, he did not come to my room, but I found he had been up and out long before it was light, and he made his appearance at eleven o’clock, saying he had promised to go and give Lord Erymanth an account of his nephew, and wanted me to come with him “to do the talking, or he should never stand it.”  If I did not object to the dog-cart and Daniel O’Rourke immediately, we should be there by luncheon time.  I objected to nothing that Harry drove, but all the way to Erymanth not ten words passed, and those were matters of necessity.  I had come to the perception that when he did not want to speak it was better to let him take his own time.

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My Young Alcides from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.