The man in answer to her question relaxed his hold upon her arm, and with a long breath fell back on his pillow.
“Ah!” said he, “if I could only see him again safe and well, if I could only leave you with him as your protector and support, I believe I could forgive all the past and be reconciled even to my hard lot.”
“God gives you opportunity so to do, my father, for here I am safe and sound.”
The soft snow had muffled the son’s footsteps, and his approach had been unnoted. Entering at the back door, and passing through the kitchen, he had surprised his parents in the painful scene above described. As he saw his mother’s form in dim outline kneeling at the bed, her face buried in its covering—as he heard his father’s significant words—the quick-witted youth realized the situation. While he loved his father dearly, and honored him for his many good traits, he was also conscious of his faults, especially this most serious one now threatening such fatal consequences—that of charging to God the failures and disappointments resulting from defects in his own character. It seemed as if a merciful Providence was about to use this awful dread of accident to the son—a calamity that rose far above and overshadowed all the past—as the means of winning back the alienated heart of this weak and erring man.
The effect of the sudden presence in the sickroom was most marked. The poor mother, who had shown such self-control and patient endurance before, now gave way utterly, and clung for a few moments to her son’s neck with hysterical energy, then in strong reaction fainted away. The strain upon her worn and overtaxed system had been too severe.
At first the sick man could only look through the dusk at the outline of his son with a bewildered stare, his mind too weak to comprehend the truth. But soon he too was sobbing for joy.
But when his wife suddenly became a lifeless weight in his son’s arms, who in wild alarm cried, “Mother, what is the matter? Speak to me! Oh! I have killed her by my rash entrance,” the sick man’s manner changed, and his eyes again became dry and hard, and even in the darkness had a strange glitter.
“Is your mother dead?” he asked, in a low, hoarse voice.
“Oh, mother, speak to me!” cried the son, forgetting for a time his father.
For a moment there was deathlike silence. Then the young man groped for an old settle in the corner of the room, laid his mother tenderly upon it, and sprang for a light, but as he passed his father’s bed the same strong grasp fell upon his arm that his mother had shuddered under a little before, and the question was this time hissed in his ear, “Is your mother dead?” For a moment he had no power to answer, and his father continued: “What a fool I was to expect God to show mercy or kindness to me or mine while I was above ground! You are only brought home to suffer more than death in seeing your mother die. May that God that has followed me all my life, not with blessings—”
“Hush, father!” cried his son, in loud, commanding tones. “Hush, I entreat,” and in his desperation he actually put his hand over his father’s mouth.
The poor woman must have been dead, indeed, had she long remained deaf to the voice of her beloved son, and his loud tones partially revived her. In a faint voice she called, “Dennis!”
With hands suddenly relaxed, and hearts almost stilled in their beating, father and son listened for a second. Again, a little louder, through that dark and silent room, was heard the faint call, “Dennis!”
Springing to her side, her son exclaimed, “Oh, mother, I am here; don’t leave us; in mercy don’t leave us.”
“It was I she called,” said his father.
With unnatural strength he had tottered across the room, and taking his wife’s hand, cried, “Oh, Ethel, don’t die! don’t fill my already full cup to overflowing with bitterness!”
Their familiar voices were the best of remedies. After a moment she sat up, and passing her hand across her brow as if to clear away confusion of mind, said: “Don’t be alarmed; it’s only a faint turn. I don’t wonder though that you are frightened, for I never was so before.”
Poor woman, amid all the emergencies of her hard lot, she had never in the past given way so far.
Then, becoming aware of her husband’s position, she exclaimed: “Why, Dennis, my husband, out of your bed? You will catch your death.”
“Ah, wife, that matters little if you and Dennis live.”
“But it matters much to me,” cried she, springing up.
By this time her son had struck a light, and each was able to look on the other’s face. The unnatural strength, the result of excitement, was fast leaving the sick man. The light revealed him helplessly leaning on the couch where his wife had lain. His face was ashen in color, and he was gasping for breath. Tenderly they carried him back to his bed, and he was too weak now to do more than quietly lie upon it and gaze at them. After replenishing the fire, and looking at the little ones that were sleeping in the outer room, they shaded the lamp, and sat down at his bedside, while the mother asked her son many eager questions as to his escape. He told them how he had struggled through the snow till almost exhausted, when he had been overtaken by a farmer with a strong team, and thus enabled to make the journey in safety.
As the sick man