登陆注册
19640600000022

第22章 CHAPTER VI THE PICNIC(3)

"Good morning, ladies," he said, removing the new cap which Seth had recently purchased for him in Eastboro. "Mr. Stover tells me you wish to be shown the lights."

The plump woman answered. "Yes," she said, briskly, "we do. Are you a new keeper? Where's Mr. Atkins?"

"Mr. Atkins, I regret to say," began Brown, "is ill. He--"

Stover, standing at his elbow, interrupted nervously.

"Mr. Brown here'll show us around," he said quickly. "Seth said he would."

"I shall be happy," concurred that young gentleman. "You must excuse me if I seem rather worried. Mr. Atkins, my chief--I believe you know him, Mrs. Stover--has been taken suddenly ill, and is, apparently, suffering much pain. The attack was very sudden, and I--"

"Sick?" The plump woman seemed actually to prick up her ears, like a sleepy cat at the sound of the dinner bell. "Is Seth sick? And you all alone with him here? Can't I do anything to help?"

"All he wants is to be left alone," put in her husband anxiously.

"He said so himself."

"Do you know what's the matter? Have you got any medicine for him?"

Mrs. Stover was already climbing out of the buggy.

"No," replied Brown. "I haven't. That is, I haven't given him any yet."

The slim woman, Mrs. Hains of Boston, now broke into the conversation.

"Good thing!" she snapped. "Most medicine's nothing but opium and alcohol. Fill the poor creature full of drugs and--"

"I s'pose you'd set and preach New Thought at him!" snapped Mrs.

Stover. "As if a body could be cured by hot air! I believe I'll go right in and see him. Don't you s'pose I could help, Mr. Brown?"

Mr. Brown seemed pleased, but reluctant. "It's awfully good of you," he said. "I couldn't think of troubling you when you've come so far on a pleasure excursion. But I am at my wit s end."

"Don't say another word!" Mrs. Stover's bulky figure was already on the way to the door of the house. "I'm only too glad to do what I can. And, if I do say it, that shouldn't, I'm always real handy in a sick room. 'Bijah, be quiet; I don't care if we ARE on a picnic; no human bein' shall suffer while I set around and do nothin'."

Mrs. Hains was at her cousin's heels.

"You'll worry him to death," she declared. "You'll tell him how sick he is, and that he's goin' to die, and such stuff. What he needs is cheerful conversation and mental uplift. It's too bad!

Well, you sha'n't have your own way with him, anyhow. Mr. Brown, where is he?"

"You two goin' to march right into his BEDROOM?" screamed the irate Abijah. The women answered not. They were already in the kitchen.

Brown hastened after them.

"It's all right, ladies," he said. "Right this way, please."

He led the way to the chamber of the sick man. Mr. Atkins turned on his bed of pain, caught a glimpse of the visitors, and sat up.

"What in time?" he roared.

"Seth," said Brown, benignly, "this is Mrs. Stover of Eastboro. I think you know her. And Mrs. Hains of Boston. These ladies have heard of your sickness, and, having had experience in such cases, have kindly offered to stay with you and help in any way they can.

Mrs. Stover, I will leave him in your hands. Please call me if I can be of any assistance."

Without waiting for further comment from the patient, whose face was a picture, he hastened to the kitchen, choking as he went. Mr.

Stover met him at the outer door.

"Now you've done it!" wailed the little man. "NOW you've done it!

Didn't I tell you? Oh, this'll be a hell of a picnic!"

He stalked away, righteous indignation overcoming him. Brown sat down in a rocking chair and shook with emotion. From the direction of the sick room came the sounds of three voices, each trying to outscream the other. The substitute assistant listened to this for a while, and, as he did so, a new thought struck him. He remembered a story he had read in a magazine years before. He crossed to the pantry, found an empty bottle, rinsed it at the sink, stepped again to the pantry, and, entering it, closed the door behind him. There he busied himself with the molasses jug, the soft-soap bucket, the oil can, the pepper shaker, and a few other utensils and their contents. Footsteps in the kitchen caused him to hurriedly reenter that apartment. Mrs. Stover was standing by the range, her face red.

"Oh, there you are, Mr. Brown!" she exclaimed. "I wondered where you'd gone to."

"How is he?" inquired Brown, the keenest anxiety in his utterance.

"H'm! he'd do well enough if he had the right treatment. I cal'late he's better now, even as 'tis; but, when a person has to lay and hear over and over again that what ails 'em is nothin' but imagination, it ain't to be wondered at that they get mad. What he needs is some sort of soothin' medicine, and I only wish 'twan't so fur over to home. I've got just what he needs there."

"I was thinking--" began Brown.

"What was you thinkin'?"

"I was wondering if some of my 'Stomach Balm' wouldn't help him.

It's an old family receipt, handed down from the Indians, I believe.

I always have a bottle with me and . . . Still, I wouldn't prescribe, not knowing the disease."

Mrs. Stover's eyes sparkled. Patent medicines were her hobby.

"Hum!" she said. "'Stomach Balm' sounds good. And he says his trouble is principally stomach. Some of them Indian medicines are mighty powerful. Have you--did you say you had a bottle with you, Mr. Brown?"

The young man went again to the pantry and returned with the bottle he had so recently found there. Now, however, it was two thirds full of a black sticky mixture. Mrs. Stover removed the cork and took an investigating sniff.

"It smells powerful," she said, hopefully.

"It is. Would you like to taste it?" handing her a tablespoon. He watched as she swallowed a spoonful.

"Ugh! oh!" she gasped; even her long suffering palate rebelled at THAT taste. "It--I should think that OUGHT to help him."

"I should think so. It may be the very thing he needs. At any rate, it can't hurt him. It's quite harmless."

Mrs. Stover's face was still twisted, under the influence of the "Balm"; but her mind was made up.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 神兽遮天

    神兽遮天

    上神盘古开天地,功成可比日月明。伏羲八卦参天机,女娲金身补天痕。金蛇进阶成天龙,龙生九子各迥异。囚牛琴声悦天地,睚毗神剑斩万灵。朝风金环套水火,蒲牢钟鸣破乾坤。狻猊丹炉焚万物,霸下神碑录功绩。狴犴天眼明是非,负屃宝扇风水起。螭吻年少有天心,地目泣雨润大地。六道轮回十万年,大劫将至人不明。两帝殒身殉天劫,太极八卦始归一。九子作阵天作穴,九器神威不可敌。封劫渡世得圆满,事事难料九不一!群号:150300922
  • 女扮男装:少爷请多指教

    女扮男装:少爷请多指教

    甄希从小就被当成男孩子养着,精通剑道、柔道、跆拳道、散打?能隐藏性别的传家玉佩?樱雪学院??混个风生水起?双眼微眯,朱唇轻扬,妖娆一笑,翻手为白莆,覆手为樱雪,腹黑行动,正式,开始了哟!
  • 怨灵实录

    怨灵实录

    一桩命案,几件带血的证物,让原本生活安逸循规蹈矩的后勤警谭琛陷入漩涡中:神秘死去的女大学生,意外身亡的同事,行为古怪诡异的证人们……现实和异度空间双重压力,似曾相识的场景,慢慢唤起他记忆深处的惊悚。
  • 豪门难入:贵公子的麻雀妻

    豪门难入:贵公子的麻雀妻

    春日晴朗的某一天,精神病院里来了一位男子,想不到这样漂亮的男孩子竟然是个傻子!????苏半夏一脸的惋惜,无奈的拍着他的头,“可惜了,你要不是傻子,我一定追你!”他默默的弯起嘴角,让她错以为他爱她。一切的生活,居然都被他精心算计,原来,这不过是他的一场游戏。--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 月经期妇女宜吃食物

    月经期妇女宜吃食物

    本书简单介绍了月经的基本知识,详细叙述了月经期的饮食调养,以及月经不调、闭经、痛经、经前期综合征、绝经期综合征5种月经病宜吃的食物和600多个食疗验方。
  • 末日后的地球

    末日后的地球

    “什么,我是流氓?”林狼大怒。“靠,我还没摸你呢!!!”
  • 西山政训

    西山政训

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 网游之太昊

    网游之太昊

    “太昊”,虚拟式网游,真实度99%。是多家顶尖网络公司联合研究多年并推出。无GM,一切由智能生物脑“太昊”管辖。雒雅,标志是及膝长发和甜甜的酒窝。楚瑜,妖孽一枚,除了他家雒雒其他事都与之无关。这对极品腹黑未婚夫妻,会在这里面掀起多大的风浪呢?
  • 渣女逆袭——你逃不过我手掌心

    渣女逆袭——你逃不过我手掌心

    某女桃花运爆发,遭表白,好日子不长又遭甩,哈!某女保存17年的自尊心,是可忍孰不可忍,一次酝酿好的班级旅游计划竟然酿成一场事故,某可怜女因这次事故不怎么聪明的大脑被激发,励志夺回,你们给我在学校里老实呆着,我要回去了!
  • 花开半城

    花开半城

    难道只有百富美才有那样美丽梦幻的爱情嘛?那不是让我们这些普通少女只能想想了嘛?万一得妄想症怎么办?所以这是一个普普通通的女生的爱情故事~由于是新手所以内容简介就先这样吧...请看文~