
XVII

WHEN HE ENTERED THE chamber of death, he was
brooding over the recent encounter and devising extravagant
revenges upon Blue Billie and the others.
The little old woman was stretched upon her bed.
Her face and hands were of the hue of the blankets. Her hair,
seemingly of a new and wondrous grayness, hung over her temples in
whips and tangles. She was sickeningly motionless, save for her
eyes, which rolled and swayed in maniacal glances.
A young doctor had just been administering
medicine. “There,” he said, with a great satisfaction, “I guess
that’ll do her good!” As he went briskly toward the door he met
Kelcey. “Oh,” he said. “Son?”
Kelcey had that in his throat which was like fur.
When he forced his voice, the words came first low and then high as
if they had broken through something. “Will she—will she—”
The doctor glanced back at the bed. She was
watching them as she would have watched ghouls, and muttering.
“Can’t tell,” he said. “She’s wonderful woman! Got more vitality
than you and I together! Can’t tell! May—may not! Good-day! Back in
two hours.”
In the kitchen Mrs. Callahan was feverishly dusting
the furniture, polishing this and that. She arranged everything in
decorous rows. She was preparing for the coming of death. She
looked at the floor as if she longed to scrub it.
The doctor paused to speak in an undertone to her,
glancing at the bed. When he departed she labored with a renewed
speed.
Kelcey approached his mother. From a little
distance he called to her. “Mother—mother—” He proceeded with
caution lest this mystic being upon the bed should clutch at
him.
“Mother—mother—don’t yeh know me?” He put forth
apprehensive, shaking fingers and touched her hand.
There were two brilliant steel-colored points upon
her eyeballs. She was staring off at something sinister.
Suddenly she turned to her son in a wild babbling
appeal. “Help me! Help me! Oh, help me! I see them coming.”
Kelcey called to her as to a distant place.
“Mother! Mother!” She looked at him, and then there began within
her a struggle to reach him with her mind. She fought with some
implacable power whose fingers were in her brain. She called to
Kelcey in stammering, incoherent cries for help.
Then she again looked away. “Ah, there they come!
There they come! Ah, look—look—loo—” She arose to a sitting posture
without the use of her arms.
Kelcey felt himself being choked. When her voice
pealed forth in a scream he saw crimson curtains moving before his
eyes. “Mother—oh, mother—there’s nothin’—there’s nothin’—”
She was at a kitchen-door with a dish-cloth in her
hand. Within there had just been a clatter of crockery. Down
through the trees of the orchard she could see a man in a field
ploughing. “Bill—o-o-oh, Bill—have yeh seen Georgie? Is he out
there with you? Georgie! Georgie! Come right here this minnet!
Right—this—minnet!”
She began to talk to some people in the room. “I
want t’ know what yeh want here! I want yeh t’ git out! I don’t
want yeh here! I don’t feel good t‘-day, an’ I don’t want yeh here!
I don’t feel good t’day! I want yeh t’ git out!” Her voice became
peevish. “Go away! Go away! Go away!”
Kelcey lay in a chair. His nerveless arms allowed
his fingers to sweep the floor. He became so that he could not hear
the chatter from the bed, but he was always conscious of the
ticking of the little clock out on the kitchen shelf.
When he aroused, the pale-faced but plump young
clergyman was before him.
“My poor lad—” began this latter.
The little old woman lay still with her eyes
closed. On the table at the head of the bed was a glass containing
a water-like medicine. The reflected lights made a silver star on
its side. The two men sat side by side, waiting. Out in the kitchen
Mrs. Callahan had taken a chair by the stove and was waiting.
Kelcey began to stare at the wall-paper. The
pattern was clusters of brown roses. He felt them like hideous
crabs crawling upon his brain.
Through the door-way he saw the oil-cloth covering
of the table catching a glimmer from the warm afternoon sun. The
window disclosed a fair, soft sky, like blue enamel, and a fringe
of chimneys and roofs, resplendent here and there. An endless roar,
the eternal trample of the marching city, came mingled with vague
cries. At intervals the woman out by the stove moved restlessly and
coughed.
Over the transom from the hall-way came two
voices.
“Johnnie!”
“Wot!”
“You come right here t’ me! I want yehs t’ go t’ d’
store fer me!”
“Ah, ma, send Sally!”
“No, I will not! You come right here!”
“All right, in a minnet!”
“Johnnie!”
“In a minnet, I tell yeh! ”
“Johnnie—” There was the sound of a heavy tread,
and later a boy squealed. Suddenly the clergyman started to his
feet. He rushed forward and peered. The little old woman was
dead.