“All right, but the firm’s wrong. It’s going to be Brooks and Brooks,” and Peter kissed her.
“There is one thing,” and Sheila gently disentangled herself. “There are days and days before the wedding, and if everybody thinks I am going to do nothing until then, everybody is very much mistaken. I’m going in this minute to sign up for my last case in the Surgical.”
It must have been just at this moment that Fate turned on an arbitrary signal-light and changed a switch. I should like to think that back of his grin lurked a tiny shadow of contrition.
“And what am I going to do?” Peter called dolefully after her.
“Oh, I don’t know. You might write an article on the dangers and uncertainties of marrying any woman in a profession.” And she blew him a farewell kiss.
The train from the city, that night, brought a handful of patients, and one of these wore the uniform and insignia of a lieutenant of the Engineers. His mother came with him. She had been an old patient, and because of extraordinary circumstances—I use the government term—she had obtained his discharge from a military hospital and had brought him to the San to mend.
“The wounds are slow in closing, and there’s some nervous trouble,” Miss Maxwell explained to Sheila. “The boy’s face is rather tragic. Will you take the case?”
She accepted with her usual curt nod and a hasty departure for her uniform. A half-hour later she was back in the Surgical, her fear as well as her happiness forgotten in the call of another human being in distress. The superintendent of nurses was right: the boy’s face was tragic, and a frail little mother hovered over him as if she would breathe into his lungs the last breath from her own. She looked up wistfully, a little fearsomely, as Sheila entered; then a smile of thanksgiving swept her face like a flash of sunlight.
“Oh, I’m so glad! I remember you well. I hoped—but it hardly seemed possible—I didn’t dare really to expect it. When I was here before, you were always so needed, and my boy—of course there is nothing serious—only—” and the shaking voice ended as incoherently as it had begun.
The nurse took the withered hands held out to her in her young, warm ones. In an instant she saw all that the little mother had been through—the renunciation months before when she had given her boy up to his country; the long, weary weeks of learning to do without him; the schooling it had taken to grow patient, waiting for the letters that came sparingly or not at all; and at last the news that he was at the front, under fire, when the papers published all the news there was to be told. Sheila saw it all, even to her blind, frantic groping for the God she had only half known and into whose hands she had never wholly given the keeping of her loved ones. And after that the cable and the waiting for what was left of her boy to come home to her. As she looked down at her, Sheila had the strange feeling that this frail little mother was dividing the care of her boy between God and herself, and she smiled unconsciously at this new partnership.