But days went by, and the invalid was no better. She lay, quiet and uncomplaining, in the airy bedroom, while October walked over the mountain ranges, and the grapes were gathered, and the apples brought in. She took the doctor’s medicine, and his advice, and agreed pleasantly with him that she would soon be well enough to go home, and would be better off there. But she would not try to get up.
One afternoon, while she was lying with closed eyes, she heard the rattle of the doctor’s old buggy outside, and heard Manzanita greet him from where she was labelling jelly glasses on the porch. Mrs. Phelps could trace the old man’s panting approach to a porch chair, and heard Manzanita go into the house with a promise of lemonade and crullers. In a few minutes she was back again, and the clink of ice against glass sounded pleasantly in the hot afternoon.
“Well, how is she?” said the doctor, presently, with a long, wet gasp of satisfaction.
“She’s asleep,” answered Manzanita. “I just peeked in.—There’s more of that,” she added, in apparent reference to the iced drink. And then, with a change of tone, she added, “What’s the matter with her, anyway, Doc’ Jim?”
To which the old doctor with great simplicity responded:
“You’ve got me, Manz’ita. I can diagnose as good as any one,” he went on after a pause, “when folks have got something. If you mashed your hand in a food cutter, or c’t something poisonous, or come down with scarlet fever, I’d know what to do for ye. But, these rich women—”
“Well, you know, I could prescribe for her, and cure her, too,” said Manzanita. “All I’d do is tell her she’d got to go home right off. I’d say that this climate was too bracing for her, or something.”
“Shucks! I did say that,” interrupted the doctor.
“Yes, but you didn’t say you thought she’d ought to take her son along in case of need,” the girl added significantly. There was a long pause.
“She don’t want ye to marry him, hey?” said the doctor, ending it.
Manzanita evidently indicated an assent, for he presently resumed indignantly: “Who does she want for him—Adelina Patti?” He marvelled over a third glass. “Well, what do you know about that!” he murmured. Then, “Well, I’ll be a long time prescribing that.”
“No, I want you to send her off, and send him with her,” said Manzanita, decidedly, “that’s why I’m telling you this. I’ve thought it all over. I don’t want to be mean about it. She thinks that if he saw his sister, and his old friends, and his old life, he’d get to hate the Yerba Buena. At first I laughed at her, and so did Aus. But, I don’t know, Doc’ Jim, she may be right!”
“Shucks!” said the doctor, incredulously.