“Have you sent for Dr. Price?”
“There was no one to send—the servants were gone, and the nurse was afraid to venture out into the street. I telephoned for Dr. Price, and found that he was out of town; that he had gone up the river this morning to attend a patient, and would not be back until tomorrow. Mrs. Price thought that he had anticipated some kind of trouble in the town today, and had preferred to be where he could not be called upon to assume any responsibility.”
“I suppose you tried Dr. Ashe?”
“I could not get him, nor anyone else, after that first call. The telephone service is disorganized on account of the riot. We need medicine and ice. The drugstores are all closed on account of the riot, and for the same reason we couldn’t get any ice.”
Major Carteret stood beside the brass bedstead upon which his child was lying—his only child, around whose curly head clustered all his hopes; upon whom all his life for the past year had been centred. He stooped over the bed, beside which the nurse had stationed herself. She was wiping the child’s face, which was red and swollen and covered with moisture, the nostrils working rapidly, and the little patient vainly endeavoring at intervals to cough up the obstruction to his breathing.
“Is it serious?” he inquired anxiously. He had always thought of the croup as a childish ailment, that yielded readily to proper treatment; but the child’s evident distress impressed him with sudden fear.
“Dangerous,” replied the young woman laconically. “You came none too soon. If a doctor isn’t got at once, the child will die—and it must be a good doctor.”
“Whom can I call?” he asked. “You know them all, I suppose. Dr. Price, our family physician, is out of town.”
“Dr. Ashe has charge of his cases when he is away,” replied the nurse. “If you can’t find him, try Dr. Hooper. The child is growing worse every minute. On your way back you’d better get some ice, if possible.”
The major hastened downstairs.
“Don’t wait for me, Ellis,” he said. “I shall be needed here for a while. I’ll get to the office as soon as possible. Make up the paper, and leave another stick out for me to the last minute, but fill it up in case I’m not on hand by twelve. We must get the paper out early in the morning.”
Nothing but a matter of the most vital importance would have kept Major Carteret away from his office this night. Upon the presentation to the outer world of the story of this riot would depend the attitude of the great civilized public toward the events of the last ten hours. The Chronicle was the source from which the first word would be expected; it would give the people of Wellington their cue as to the position which they must take in regard to this distressful affair, which had so far transcended in ferocity the most extreme measures which the conspirators had anticipated. The burden of his own responsibility weighed heavily upon him, and could not be shaken off; but he must do first the duty nearest to him—he must first attend to his child.
Carteret hastened from the house, and traversed rapidly the short distance to Dr. Ashe’s office. Far down the street he could see the glow of the burning hospital, and he had scarcely left his own house when the fusillade of shots, fired when the colored men emerged from the burning building, was audible. Carteret would have hastened back to the scene of the riot, to see what was now going on, and to make another effort to stem the tide of bloodshed; but before the dread of losing his child, all other interests fell into the background. Not all the negroes in Wellington could weigh in the balance for one instant against the life of the feeble child now gasping for breath in the house behind him.
Reaching the house, a vigorous ring brought the doctor’s wife to the door.
“Good evening, Mrs. Ashe. Is the doctor at home?”
“No, Major Carteret. He was called to attend Mrs. Wells, who was taken suddenly ill, as a result of the trouble this afternoon. He will be there all night, no doubt.”
“My child is very ill, and I must find someone.”
“Try Dr. Yates. His house is only four doors away.”
A ring at Dr. Yates’s door brought out a young man.
“Is Dr. Yates in?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Can I see him?”
“You might see him, sir, but that would be all. His horse was frightened by the shooting on the streets, and ran away and threw the doctor, and broke his right arm. I have just set it; he will not be able to attend any patients for several weeks. He is old and nervous, and the shock was great.”
“Are you not a physician?” asked Carteret, looking at the young man keenly. He was a serious, gentlemanly looking young fellow, whose word might probably be trusted.
“Yes, I am Dr. Evans, Dr. Yates’s assistant. I’m really little more than a student, but I’ll do what I can.”
“My only child is sick with the croup, and requires immediate attention.”
“I ought to be able to handle a case of the croup,” answered Dr. Evans, “at least in the first stages. I’ll go with you, and stay by the child, and if the case is beyond me, I may keep it in check until another physician comes.”
He stepped back into another room, and returning immediately with his hat, accompanied Carteret homeward. The riot had subsided; even the glow from the smouldering hospital was no longer visible. It seemed that the city, appalled at the tragedy, had suddenly awakened to a sense of its own crime. Here and there a dark face, emerging cautiously from some hiding-place, peered from behind fence or tree, but shrank hastily away at the sight of a white face. The negroes of Wellington, with the exception of Josh Green and his party, had