The Man of the Desert
But the next few days the invalid brightened perceptibly, and Hazel began to be reassured. Sweet conversation they had together, and the girl heard the long pleasant story of the son’s visit home as the mother dwelt lovingly upon each detail, telling it over and over, until the listener felt that every spot within sight of the invalid’s window was fragrant with his memory. She enjoyed the tale as much as the teller and knew just how to give the answer that one loving woman wants from another loving woman when they speak of the beloved.
Then when the story was told over and over and nothing was left to tell except the pleasant recalling of a funny speech or some tender happening, Hazel asked deeper questions about the things of life and eternity. And step-by-step the older woman led her in the path she’d led her son through his childhood years.
During this time she seemed to grow stronger again. Some days she sat up for a little while and let them put the meals on a tiny swinging table by her chair. And she took a deep interest in leading the girl to a heavenly knowledge. Every day she asked for her writing materials and wrote for a little while. Yet Hazel noticed she didn’t send all she wrote in the envelope of weekly letters but laid it away carefully in her writing portfolio as if it were something yet unfinished.
And one evening in late September, when the last rays of the sunset were lying across the foot of the wheeled chair, and Amelia Ellen was building a bit of a fire in the fireplace because it seemed chilly, the mother called Hazel to her and handed her a letter sealed and addressed to her son.
“Dear,” she said gently, “I want you to take this letter and put it away carefully and keep it until I’m gone. Then I want you to promise that, if it’s possible for you to do it, you’ll give it to my son with your own hands.”
Hazel took the letter reverently, her heart filled with sorrow and stooped anxiously over her friend. “Oh, why,” she cried, “what’s the matter? Do you feel worse tonight? You’ve seemed so bright all day.”
“Not a bit,” said the invalid cheerily. “But I’ve been writing this for a long time—a sort of good-bye to my boy—and there’s nobody in the world I’d like to give it to him as well as you. Will it trouble you to promise me, my dear?”
Hazel with kisses and tears protested she’d be glad to fulfill the mission but begged she might be allowed to send for the beloved son at once, for a sight of his face, she knew, would be good for his mother.
At last her fears were allayed, though she was by no means sure the son shouldn’t be sent for. When the invalid had gone happily to sleep, Hazel went to her room and tried to think how she might write a letter that wouldn’t alarm the young man but would bring him to his mother’s side. She planned how she’d go away herself for a few days, so he needn’t find her here. She wrote several stiff little notes, but none of them satisfied her. Her heart longed to write, “Oh, my dear! Come quickly, for your beloved mother needs you. Come, for my heart is crying out for the sight of you! Come at once!”
But finally before she slept she sealed and addressed a dignified letter from Miss Radcliffe, his mother’s trained nurse, suggesting he make at least a brief visit at this time. She must be away for a few days, and she felt his presence would be a wise thing. His mother didn’t seem as well as when he was with her. Then, comforted, she lay down to sleep. But the letter was never sent.
In the early dawn the faithful Amelia Ellen slipped from her couch in the alcove just off the invalid’s room and went to touch a match to the carefully laid fire in the fireplace. She passed the bed and, as was her custom for years, glanced to see if all was well with her patient. At once she knew the mother’s sweet spirit had fled.
With her face turned slightly away, a smile of good night on her lips and the peace of God on her brow, the mother had entered into her rest.
Chapter 13
The Call of the Desert
Hazel, with her eyes blinded with tears and her heart swelling with the loss of the woman whose motherliness she’d come to feel a claim on, burned the letter she’d written the night before and sent a carefully worded telegram, her heart yearning with sympathy toward the bereaved son.
“Your dear mother has gone home, quietly, in her sleep. She didn’t seem any worse than usual, and her last words were of you. Let us know at once what plans we shall make. Nurse Radcliffe.” That was the telegram she sent.
Poor Amelia Ellen was inconsolable. Her practical common sense for once fled her. She did nothing but weep and moan for the beloved invalid she had served so long and faithfully. It fell to Hazel to make all decisions, though neighbors and old friends were kind with offers of help. Hazel waited anxiously for an answer to the telegram, but night fell, and no answer came. A storm had come, and something was wrong with the wires. The next morning, however, she sent another telegram, and about noon still a third, with as yet no response. She thought perhaps he didn’t wait to telegraph but started immediately and might be with them in a few hours. She watched the evening stage, but he didn’t come.
Then she realized her heart was in a flutter and wondered how she’d have the strength to meet him if he came. She had the letter from his mother and her promise. She had that excuse for her presence—of course she couldn’t have left under the circumstances. Yet she shrank from the meeting, for it seemed a breach of etiquette for her to break the separation he’d chosen should be between them.
He didn’t come, however, and the third morning, when it became imperative for something definite to be known, a telegram to the station agent in Arizona brought answer that the missionary was away on a long trip among some Indian tribes. His exact whereabouts weren’t known, but messengers had been sent after him, and word would be sent as soon as possible. The minister and the old neighbors consulted with Amelia Ellen and Hazel and made simple plans for the funeral, yet they hoped and delayed as long as possible. When at last, after repeated telegrams, the answer still came, “Messenger not yet returned,” they bore the woman’s worn-out body to a quiet resting place beside her husband in the churchyard on the hillside. There the soft maples scattered bright covering over the new mound, and the sky arched high with a kind of triumphant reminder of where the spirit had gone.
Hazel tried to have every detail just as she thought he’d like it. The neighbors brought their homegrown flowers in great quantities, and some city friends who were old summer boarders sent hothouse roses. The minister conducted the beautiful service of faith, and the village children sang around the casket of their old friend, who’d always loved every one of them. Their hands were full of late flowers from her own garden, bright scarlet and blue and gold, as though it were a joyous occasion. Indeed, Hazel had the impression, even as she moved in the hush of the presence of death, that she was helping at some solemn festivity of deep joy instead of a funeral—so glorious was the hope of the one who was gone, so triumphant her faith in her Savior.
After the funeral was over Hazel sat down and wrote a letter telling about it all, filling it with sympathy. She tried to show their effort to have things as he’d like them and expressed deep sorrow that they were compelled to go on with the service without him.
That night a message came from the Arizona station agent. The missionary had been found in a distant Indian hogan with a dislocated ankle. He sent word that they mustn’t wait for him; he’d get there in time, if possible. A later message the next day said he was still unable to travel but would go to the railroad as soon as possible. Then came an interval of several days without any word from Arizona.
Hazel went about with Amelia Ellen, putting the house in order and hearing the beautiful plaint of the loving-hearted, mourning servant as she told little incidents about her mistress. Here was the chair she sat in the last time she went upstairs to oversee the spring regulating, and that was Mr. John’s baby gown he was christened in. His mother had smoothed it out and told her one day of what he was like as a baby. She laid it away herself in the box with the blue shoes and the crocheted cap. It was the last time she ever
came upstairs.
She pointed out the gray silk dress she had worn to weddings and dinner parties before her husband died, and beneath it in the trunk lay a white embroidered muslin, her wedding gown. It was yellow with age and delicate as a spider’s web, with frostwork of yellow embroidery strewn quaintly on its ancient form and a touch of real lace. Hazel laid a reverent hand on the fine old fabric and felt, as she looked through the old trunk’s treasures, that an inner sanctuary of sweetness had been opened for her to glimpse.
At last, a letter came from the West.
It was addressed to “Miss Radcliffe, Nurse,” in John Brownleigh’s firm, clear hand, and began, “Dear Madam.” Hazel’s hand trembled as she opened it, and the “dear madam” brought the tears to her eyes. But then, of course, he didn’t know.
He thanked her, with all the kindness and graciousness of his mother’s son, for attending to his dear mother and told her many pleasant things his mother had written of her service. He spoke briefly of being laid up lamed in the Indian reservation and his deep grief that he couldn’t come East to be beside his mother during her last hours. He went on to say it was his mother’s wish, expressed many times, for him not to leave his post to come to her and that “no sadness of farewell” was needed when she “embarked.” Though it was hard for him he knew it would fulfill his mother’s desires.
Now that she was gone and looking on her dear face was impossible, he decided he couldn’t bear it just yet to come home and see all the dear familiar places with her gone. He’d wait awhile, until he’d grown used to the thought of her in heaven, and then it wouldn’t be so hard. Perhaps he wouldn’t come home until next spring, unless something called him; he couldn’t tell. In any case, his injured ankle prevented him from making the journey at present, no matter how much he may desire to do so. Miss Radcliffe’s letter told him everything was done just as he’d have had it done. Nothing further made it necessary for him to come.
He wrote to his mother’s lawyer to arrange his mother’s few business affairs, and it only remained for him to express his deep gratitude toward those who stood by his dear mother when it was impossible for him to do so. He closed with a request that the nurse would give him her permanent address so he might find her when he came East again, since he’d enjoy thanking her face-to-face for what she was to his mother.
That was all.
Hazel felt a blank dizziness settle down over her as she finished the letter. It put him miles away from her again, with years perhaps before seeing him. She suddenly seemed fearfully alone in a world that no longer interested her. Where should she go, and what would she do with her life now? Back to the hard grind of the hospital with nobody to care and the heartrending scenes and tragedies enacted daily? Somehow her strength seemed to leave her at the thought. Here, too, she’d failed. She wasn’t fit for the life, and the hospital people discovered it and sent her away to nurse her friend and try to get well. They were kind and talked about when she’d return to them, but she knew in her heart they felt her unfit and didn’t want her back.
Should she return to her home, summon her brother and aunt, and plunge into society again? The idea sickened her. Never again would she care for that life, she was certain. As she searched her heart to see what she really craved, if anything in the whole world, she found her only interest was the mission field of Arizona. And now that her dear friend was gone she was cut off from knowing much about that.
She gathered herself together after awhile and told Amelia Ellen of Mr. Brownleigh’s decision. Together they planned how the house should be closed and everything put in order to await its master’s will to return.
But that night Hazel couldn’t sleep, for suddenly, in the midst of her sad reflections, came the thought of the letter left in her trust. It was forgotten during the strenuous days following the death of its writer. Hazel thought of it only once and that on the first morning, with a comforting reflection that it would help the son bear his sorrow and she was glad it was her privilege to put it in his hand. Then the occasion’s perplexities drove it from her thoughts. Now it came back like a swift light in a precious bond that would hold him to her for a little while longer. But how should she give it to him?
Should she send it by mail? No, for that wouldn’t fulfill the letter of her promise. She knew the mother wished her to give it to him herself. Well then, should she write and summon him to his old home at once, tell him about the letter and yet refuse to send it to him? How strange that would seem! How could she explain it to him? His mother’s whim would be sacred to him, of course. But he’d think it strange for a young woman to make so much of it and not trust the letter to the mail now that circumstances made it impossible for him to come at once.
Neither would it do for her to keep the letter until he returned to the East and looked her up. It might be years.
The puzzling question kept whirling about in her mind for hours until at last she formulated a plan that seemed to solve the problem.
She would coax Amelia Ellen to take a trip to California with her, and on the way they’d stop in Arizona and put the letter into the young man’s hands. By that time no doubt his injured ankle would be sufficiently strong for him to return from the journey to the Indian reservation. She’d say she was going West and, since she promised his mother she’d put the letter into his hands, she took this opportunity to stop off and keep her promise. The trip would be a good thing for Amelia Ellen, too, and take her mind off her loneliness for the mistress who was gone.
Eagerly she broached the subject to Amelia Ellen the next morning and was met with a blank look of dismay.
“I couldn’t noways you’d fix it, my dearie,” she said, shaking her head. “I’d like nuthin’ better’n to see them big trees out in Californy I’ve been hearin’ ’bout all my life—an’ summer an’ winter with snow on the mountains what some of the boarders ‘t th’ inn tells ’bout. But I can’t bring it ’bout.
“You see it’s this way. Peter Burley ‘n’ I ben promused fer nigh on to twelve year now, an’ when he ast me I said no, I couldn’t leave Mis’ Brownleigh long’s she needed me. An’ he sez will I marry him the week after she dies, an’ I sez I didn’t like no sech dismal way o’ puttin’ it. An’ he sez well then, will I marry him the week after she don’t need me no more. An’ I sez yes, I will, an’ now I gotta keep my promus! I can’t go back on my faithful word. I’d like real well to see them big trees, but I gotta keep my promus!
“You see he’s waited long ‘nough, an’ he’s ben real patient. He couldn’t always see me every week, an’ he might ‘a’ tuk Delmira that cooked to the inn five year ago. She’d ‘a’ had him in a minnit, an’ she done her best to git him. But he stayed faithful, an’ he sez, sez he, ‘ ‘Meelia El’n, ef you’re meanin’ to keep your word, I’ll wait ef it’s a lifetime, but I hope you won’t make it any longer’n you need.’ An’ the night he said that, I promused him agin I’d be hisn soon ez ever I was free to do’s I pleased. I’d like to see them big trees, but I can’t do it. I jes’ can’t do it.”
Now Hazel wasn’t a young woman easily balked in her plans once they were made. She was convinced the only thing to do was take this trip and Amelia Ellen was the only person in the world she wanted for a companion. Therefore she made immediate acquaintance with Peter Burley, a heavy-browed, thoughtful, stolid man, who looked his character of patient lover, every inch of him, blue overalls and all.
Hazel’s heart almost misgave her as she unfolded her plan to his astonished ears and saw the look of dismay spreading over his face. He hadn’t waited all these years, however, to refuse his sweetheart anything within reason now. He drew a deep sigh, inquired how long the trip as planned would take, allowed he “could wait another month ef that would suit” and turned patiently to his barnyard to think his weary thoughts and set his hopes a little further ahead. Then Hazel’s heart misgave her. She called after him and suggested that perhaps he might like to have the marriage first and go with them, taking th
e excursion as a wedding trip. She’d gladly pay all expenses if he would. But the man shook his head.
“I couldn’t leave the stock fer that long, ennyhow you fix it. Thur ain’t no one would know to take my place. Besides, I never was fer takin’ journeys. But ‘Meelia Ellen, she’s allus ben of a sprightlier disposition, an’ ef she hez a hankerin’ after Californy, I ‘spect she’ll be more contented like ef she sees ’em first an’ then settles down in Granville. She better go while she’s got the chancet.”
Amelia Ellen succumbed, though with tears. Hazel couldn’t tell whether she was more glad or sad at the prospect before her. At times Amelia Ellen wept and bemoaned the fate of poor Burley, and other times she questioned whether there really were any big trees like what you saw in the geographies with riding parties sitting contentedly in tunnels through their trunks. But at last she consented to go. With many injunctions from admiring, envious neighbors who came to see them off, Amelia Ellen bid a sobbing good-bye to her solemn beloved in the gray dawn of an October morning. Then she climbed into the stage behind Hazel, and they drove away into the mystery of the great world.
Amelia Ellen looked back at her Peter, standing patient, stooped, and gray in the familiar village street looking after his departing sweetheart who was going sightseeing into the world. She would almost have jumped out over the wheel and run back if it hadn’t been for what the neighbors would say, for her heart was Burley’s. Now that the big trees were actually pulling harder than Burley, and she’d decided to go and see them, Burley began by his very acquiescence to pull harder than the big trees.