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Camilla Chrystie was losing hope. She’d had an accident while rushing to get medicine for her beloved mother, who was dangerously ill. Then, miraculously, a handsome and wealthy playboy had offered Camilla his help. But when they had joined together in a desperate effort to save Camilla’s mother, they had found themselves drawn into a friendship that surprised them both. Touched and warmed by their time together, Camilla is soon caught in yet another dilemma. Should she trust the man’s solemn words of friendship—and love—even though he had returned to his world of wealth and seemingly forgotten about her completely? Was what they shared real, or is she being foolish to believe his assertion that they could find a true and lasting love together?
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Grace Livingston Hill
WHITE ORCHIDS
First published in 1935
Copyright © 2019 Classica Libris
The light flashed red, and Camilla jammed on her brakes. The shabby little roadster came to a frightened, screeching stop just as a large truck came smashing down the crossroad, full power, striking the little car with a mighty impact, neatly removing a wheel and sending the car spinning straight into the air in a series of somersaults. It landed in the opposite ditch with crumpled fenders, broken bumpers, a twisted axle, and a fatal injury to its internal organs.
Behind the roadster a big shining car had stopped just in time, and a good-looking young man in evening dress and a rich fur-trimmed overcoat stepped out into the road and came over to see the wreck. He was tall, with a nice face, a firm mouth, and pleasant eyes. Just now they were filled with concern as he peered across the ditch into the darkness where the shabby little broken car lay upside down.
The driver of the truck lay across the road with a broken leg, only partly sobered.
Camilla lay huddled inside the little broken roadster, stunned from the shock, unable for the moment to cope with the happening.
“Anybody hurt?” asked the young man from the sedan in a voice that matched his fine face. The traffic cop was approaching excitedly from across the road.
“They sure oughtta be!” said the officer. “Truck driver is drunk as a fish, don’t know what it’s all about! Fool girl driving a junker! She tried to pass my light, didya see her? They all do. Girls think they can get by with anything!”
“But she stopped the instant the light went red. I was right behind her, and I saw. Didn’t you see her? Didn’t you hear her brakes?”
“Oh yeah? Sure! I heard! I hear everything! All the same, she was tryin’ ta get by, an’ now she’s probably done for herself! Well, it happens every day, an’ I gotta get her outta here. Traffic gettin’ all balled up!”
He turned his flashlight onto the dark little crumpled car, and the young man caught a glimpse of a white face and a huddled slender form.
The door was jammed shut, and it was some seconds before their united efforts got it open. The stalwart policeman lifted out the girl with strong, accustomed movements. These things happen every day! Just another fool girl! He poised her on his arm and looked around for a place to lay her until the ambulance came.
“Put her in the backseat of my car!” said the young man graciously. “It’s too cold and wet to lay her down by the roadside.”
There was a genuineness about him that even the hurried traffic cop respected, and that in spite of the gardenia in his lapel.
“Aw right!” said the officer, with an eye already across the road, dealing with the drunken driver. He turned and took a step toward the big, beautiful car.
It was then Camilla opened her eyes and came to an understanding of things. Her eyes were large and dark, and her hair, which had fallen down around her face, was like fine spun gold.
“I’m—all right!” she murmured breathlessly. “Put me down, please—! I’ll be all right! I can stand.”
She slid to her feet, steadying herself with her hand on the officer’s arm, and looked around her, dazed. She felt for her hat, which had fallen on the ground, and the young man from the sedan picked it up and handed it to her.
“Thank you,” she said, taking an uncertain step toward her car, blinking her eyes to discern its dark, unshapely outlines in the ditch.
She looked at it dazedly and swayed, almost falling. The young man put out a steadying arm.
“I’m all right,” she said again, straining her eyes toward her car. “If you’ll just please—help me to get my car back—on the road—” She gasped out the words, struggling desperately now to stop trembling.
“Can’t be done, lady!” said the policeman. “That car has traveled its last road! It ain’t nothin’ but a bunch o’ junk now!”
Camilla’s big troubled eyes looked in horror at the officer and then turned to the young man with an appeal in her young, frightened eyes that instantly enlisted his sympathy.
“Oh, but it’s got to go!” she said desperately. “I’ve got to get on. I’m in a great hurry!”
“So I saw, lady, afore you decided ta put on yer brakes. Yer brakes are no good, anyhow. Guess ya ain’t had yer car inspected yet, hev ya? Them brakes would never get by an inspector. Ef ya hadn’t a ben in such a hurry, ya mighta been goin’ on by this time instead o’ bein’ all but killed yerself, an’ yer car dead entirely.”
The officer eyed her coldly. Now that she wasn’t dead it was his business to rub in the lesson she was learning.
“But it must go!” said Camilla frantically. “Please try to set it up for me! This is an emergency! I think it will go! It—always does—!” she urged hopefully. “It’s old, but it always comes back again—and goes on!”
“Well, it won’t never do that again, lady!” said the officer dryly. “What’s yer name an’ address? I gotta have them before ya can go anywheres,” he added, getting out a pencil and notebook.
“Oh, but I must go!” added Camilla. “I can’t wait for anything! My mother is dying, and the doctor sent me to his office for some medicine that she needs at once!”
“Sorry, lady, but y’ll havta go some other way. That car won’t carry nobody nowhere! An’ I gotta have yer address ’fore I can let ya go.”
“But what shall I do? I must get that medicine!”
Camilla was trembling from head to foot now, her lips trembling, too, and tears of which she was wholly unaware were streaming down her cheeks.
The young man from the sedan stepped closer and took off his hat deferentially.
“I will take you wherever you need to go,” he said politely. “My car will travel as fast as any.”
Camilla lifted terrified eyes to his face; liked his clean-cut jaw and the lean, pleasant line of his cheek; gave a comprehensive glance at the expensive car behind her; glanced back into his eyes; and knew she could trust him.
“But—it is a long way—” she said with shaking voice. “It must be almost seven miles from here! And—I have to get back again right away to the city with the medicine!”
“That’s all right with me!” said the young man pleasantly. “Just step back here. Wouldn’t you like to lie down in the backseat? You were pretty well shaken up, you know.”
“No, I’m all right,” she said eagerly. “Let’s go quick! Every minute counts. My mother is dying. This medicine is the only hope!”
“I gotta have that address, lady. I can’t let ya go without that address!” said the policeman insistently.
The young man watched her as she gave the address. Camilla Chrystie, and a street he did not know down in the lower part of the city. He studied her trim, slender young figure, her refined, delicate profile.
“I ought to do something about my car, but I mustn’t stop now,” said Camilla breathlessly as the stranger helped her into his car.
“Look after that car, will you, Officer, till I can get back and see to it?” said the young man, tossing a bill across to the officer behind Camilla’s back.
When they were safely out of the thick of it he turned to Camilla, noting her strained, white face and the horrible anxiety that burned in her dark brown eyes.
“Now,” said the young man pleasantly, “my name’s Wainwright, Jeffrey Wainwright. Which way do we go?”
She gave him brief, crisp directions, as if she had learned them by heart.
“You’re very kind. I ought not to let you, I’m afraid. I’m probably hindering you a lot. But—you know what your mother is to you. There is nobody like your mother, and,” with a quiver of her breath, “and—she’s all I have in the world!”
“Of course!” said Wainwright with tender understanding in his tone, although he did not know. The conjured picture of his own mother showed her as he knew she probably was at that moment, elaborately gowned and playing bridge with a placid fierceness that was habitual to her. She had never been very close to him. He had known his nurses and his governesses, and later his tutors, better than his mother. Yet there was something wistful in his glance as he furtively watched the lovely girl by his side.
“We must get back to her as soon as possible,” he added, speeding up his car.
“I can’t ever thank you enough!” quavered Camilla.
“Don’t try, please. I’m just glad to be doing something worthwhile for once.”
“But I’m probably keeping you from some important engagement,” she said, coming out of her own troubles for an instant and giving a quick comprehensive glance at his handsome face, his immaculate evening attire, and the white gardenia in his buttonhole.
Wainwright stared ahead for an instant silently, then answered her deliberately, thoughtfully. “No, I don’t think it was important. In fact, it wasn’t really an engagement at all, and I shouldn’t be surprised if it turns out to be a good thing that you have kept me from it!”
Camilla stared at him, perplexed, faintly perceiving that there were problems and crises in other lives as well as her own.
“I am sure,” she said contritely, “that I am taking you far out of your way.”
“On the contrary,” said Wainwright, “you are taking me in exactly the direction I was thinking of going before I saw your car.”
“Oh,” moaned Camilla, “but you are having to take me away back again!”
“But you see, my way leads back also,” smiled the young man playfully, hoping to relieve the girl’s evident strain. “And you know, it is odd, but somehow since decisions about the evening are taken out of my hands for a time, I am strangely relieved. I wasn’t at all certain about what I ought to do before, but now I am. And I don’t think I ever before had a chance to help save somebody’s life. I somehow think we’re going to win out, don’t you?”
The girl’s eyes in her white face were startling as they looked at him through the darkness.
“Oh, I hope—! I–I’ve been praying—all the way!”
Wainwright gave her a sudden quick glance.
“Well, I’ve never done much praying myself,” he said almost embarrassed, “but I’ll drive and you pray! Perhaps it’ll take them both. But we are out to win. Let’s set our minds to that. Now, is this were we turn?”
They drove on silently for some distance, sitting alertly, watching the road. Wainwright gave her a furtive glance now and then.
“Why don’t you lean back and relax?” he asked suddenly. “You’ve had a shock, and you need to rest.”
But Camilla remained tense.
“Oh, I can’t rest now,” she said with a catch in her breath like a suppressed sob. “I must get back to Mother!”
“But we’ll get back just as quickly if you relax, you know,” he reminded her sympathetically. “It seems hard that you should have had to come away at such a time. I can’t understand how the doctor allowed you to do it! There surely must have been someone else to go. I should think he would have gone himself or sent a special messenger.”
“He couldn’t,” said Camilla, lifting her strained face to his. “He couldn’t leave my mother. And there wasn’t anybody else who could be trusted to go. You see, his office is locked, and there was nobody at home to find the medicine and the instruments he wanted. He had to tell me exactly how to find everything he wanted. He is a very wonderful doctor. He saved my mother’s life once before, you see. He ought to have been called sooner. She wouldn’t let me send for him at first. She thought she was soon going to be better, and she felt we ought not to get in his debt again. He has always been so kind.”
Wainwright considered that. There were people in the world then, well-educated, cultured people, who couldn’t afford a doctor when they were desperately ill!
“But there surely must have been somebody else in the house he could have trusted without taking you away from your mother when she was so ill,” he protested.
“No, there wasn’t anybody in the house but a woman who rooms on the floor above us. She’s staying there to help the doctor if he needs anything while I am gone. She can bring hot water and answer the telephone if I have to call him.”
There was desperation in the girl’s voice again, and he pressed harder on the gas pedal and drove fast, but he could see her white eyes watching every bit of the way.
“This is the street!” she announced at last. “It’s in the middle of the next block, the fourth house on the right-hand side.”
“But there’s no light in the house!” said Wainwright as they drew up to the curb. “Is there nobody there at all?”
“No,” said Camilla breathlessly, “the doctor’s assistant won’t be back until midnight, and his family is away in the south for a few weeks.”
“Well, you’re not going in there alone, that’s certain!” said Wainwright in a firm voice, as if he had been used to protecting this girl for years.
But Camilla was not waiting for protection. Before the car had fully come to a halt she was out, fairly flying up the steps of the house, and was fitting a key into the lock of the door. As Wainwright followed her, he was relieved to see a dignified bronze sign on the house. The girl hadn’t made a mistake in the house, then. It was a doctor’s office.
Camilla’s excited fingers had just succeeded in getting the key into the keyhole as he arrived, and putting his hand over hers, he turned the key and threw open the door.
“The switch is at the right hand!” said Camilla crisply. “The first three buttons he said would light the hall and offices.”
Wainwright found the switch and instantly a spacious hall and doors to the left appeared, and Camilla drew a free breath.
“It’s all right!” she said eagerly. “I was afraid I might have made a mistake in the house or something. But there’s his wife’s picture on the desk and his little girl and boy on the wall. And there’s the package on his desk where he said it would be. You see, it’s some special medicine he had sent away for that might have come after he left this morning. He wasn’t quite sure it had arrived.”
Her voice choked with excitement, and Wainwright looked at her, for the first time seeing her face clearly by the bright light and realizing that she was lovely.
“Is that all you had to get?” he asked, giving a quick interested glance around the office that gave so many evidences of culture and refinement.
“No,” said Camilla, “there’s a leather case, a black leather case, on the desk in the back room or perhaps on the floor by the desk. I’m to bring that. And a big bottle on the highest shelf of the cabinet in the other room. If it isn’t there it may have been put on the inner closet shelf. He may have to be with Mother all night and not have time to get back to his office before he goes to an operation.”
There was a quick catch in her breath at the thought of the possibilities the night might bring forth, but she controlled herself bravely.
They found the bottle and the case without any trouble.
“Now, do we go?” asked Wainwright.
“No,” said Camilla, “I’m to call up first, to make sure there is nothing else he needs.”
Her eyes grew suddenly dark with anxiety, and her hand trembled as she reached for the telephone.
Wainwright watched her again with admiration. The delicate flush that had been on her face as she hunted for the bottle and case had drained away, and her face was white with anguish again as she waited for the doctor’s voice.
“It’s Camilla, Dr. Willis,” she said with that catch like a sob in her voice again. “How is she?”
Wainwright, as he stood near her, could hear the quiet voice of the doctor.
“No worse, Camilla. I think her pulse is a trifle steadier. Did you find everything?”
“Yes, everything.”
“Well, hurry back. I hate to think of you driving all that way and going into an empty house alone!”
“But I’m not alone,” said Camilla shyly, with the shadow of a smile on her lips. “I found a—a kind friend on the way who came with me!” Her eyes sought Wainwright’s gratefully. He smiled back at her, and somehow comradeship seemed suddenly to be cemented between them. It was so odd! Two strangers who never expected to meet again after that evening and yet they seemed somehow well acquainted all at once.
When they had turned out the lights and locked the door, Wainwright drew her arm through his possessive, comforting grasp as they walked back to the car.
When he put her into the car she sat back with a breath of relief.
“She’s no worse!” she said, looking up at him radiantly as he took the wheel again, and now that he knew how she really looked in the light, it seemed a lovely glimpse of her inner self.
“Isn’t that great!” he breathed fervently in almost the same tone of rejoicing she had used. Being glad with someone gave him a new thrill. He had seldom been called upon to experience unselfish joy. In his world you got and you gave mostly for your own pleasure. Now it seemed that he was touching deeper, more vital matters. Sin and danger and trifling with doom could give thrills. He had hovered near enough to each one to understand. But this was new and sweet. He looked at her almost tenderly through the darkness, and then he laid his hand gently for just an instant over her small, gloved one.
“I’m so glad for you!” he said gravely.
“Thank you,” she said brightly. “You’ve been just wonderful! I don’t know how I should have gone through this awful evening without you.”
Then she was silent a minute, thoughtful.
“Was that all true, what the policeman said about my car?” she asked presently. There was a hint of anxiety in her voice, yet her manner was strong, controlled, practical, ready to accept the worst quietly.
“Well, it’s hard to say exactly,” he answered with a quick reserve in his voice. “It did look rather badly beaten up, didn’t it? But usually a good mechanic can do something with almost any car, you know.” He tried to say it cheerfully, although his better sense told him that the little car was beyond help. “Suppose we wait for daylight and expert advice before we try to think about it.”
Camilla sighed. “Yes, but expert advice costs a great deal, and I simply couldn’t afford anything just now, I’m afraid. I shall want to use every cent to make Mother comfortable.”
“Of course!” he seconded her heartily. “But your insurance will cover all that, you know. You had insurance, of course, didn’t you?”
“No,” said Camilla sadly. “I couldn’t. I bought the car for fifty dollars, and it took all I had saved to get the licenses and one secondhand tire it needed.” She ended with a brave little attempt at a laugh.
He was appalled at such details, but he did not let her know it. “Oh well, it will be up to the owner of the truck, anyway,” he said with more assurance than he felt. “Sometimes, of course, they try to slide out of such moral obligations, but you let me handle this. I’ll make it a point to call upon him tomorrow and put the thing before him in the right light. Don’t you worry.”
“Oh, but I couldn’t let you do anything more!” said Camilla in a frightened voice. “You have already done more than any stranger could possibly be expected to do.”
“Is that the way you rate me?” he said reproachfully with a twinkle in his voice. “Only a stranger, after we’ve gone on an errand like this? I thought we were friends now.”
Camilla gave him another look in the darkness, of mingled pleasure and surprise.
“You have certainly taken more trouble than any friend I have would have taken,” she said earnestly. “The truth is, I haven’t many friends in this city. We haven’t been here long, only about nine months. I haven’t had time to make friends.”
“Then you’ll let me count as a friend?” he asked gravely. “At least until your mother gets well and you have time to look me over?”
He smiled down at her through the darkness, and she felt a comforting sense of being taken care of in a sort of brotherly way.
“You certainly do not need any special looking over,” said Camilla gravely, “after the way you have befriended me tonight.”
There was a weary strain in her tone that made him look anxiously at her. It occurred to him that perhaps she had been more hurt in the collision than she would own.
“Are you sure you are all right?” he asked earnestly.
“Oh yes,” she said, rousing again and putting on that forced attention she had worn since they started on their errand.
“Well, we’ll get you home as quickly as possible,” he said, and he began to question her as to where her street was located.
He purposely avoided the scene of the accident and took a shortcut, for fortunately, he know the city well. He tried to talk cheerfully as he furtively watched her droop in her corner. It was all too evident that she had been keeping up on her nerve, and now that her errand was almost completed she was beginning to feel the reaction.
It was with great relief that he presently drew up at the house she indicated and helped her out, following her with the case and bottle. She took the little package of medicine and fairly flew up the steps and into the house.
It was a small, high, old-fashioned brick house with white marble steps of a long-ago vintage, in an unfashionable quarter of the city, invaded now by business on every hand. The other houses on either side and across from it bore signs in the windows: VACANCIES, APARTMENTS TO LET, BOARDING. It was a sordid, dreary street. But Wainwright did not wait to examine the surroundings. He hurried into the house, finding a strange anxiety at his own heart for the sick mother whom he had never seen.
The hall was of the dark, narrow type with steep stairs mounting straight up to a darker hall above. It seemed gloomy beyond description. But at the right, one half of a double door stood open, and there the gloom ceased, for the room into which it opened was surprisingly cozy and homelike. Soft lamplight, rosily shaded, played over some handsome pieces of old furniture and a good picture or two on the walls. A soft-toned rug covered the floor. There was even a speck of a fireplace with a log smoldering flickeringly and an easy chair placed beside it. And there were low bookshelves running across the room on either side of the fireplace and bits of good bric-a-brac here and there on the top shelf. It looked a pleasant place to live.
Between the front windows was a long old-fashioned mirror in a quaint gilt frame, and in that he saw reflected the room beyond, which in the parlance of other days would have been called a back parlor.
The double doors between the rooms were open, and he caught a glimpse of a wide old-fashioned bed, too large for the room, and a delicate face on the pillow, framed in silver-white hair. It was a face strangely sweet and filled with a great peace. He held his breath. Was she dead already? He could see Camilla touching her lips to the white brow with a caress as soft as a breath and then dropping quietly to her knees beside the bed. The doctor stood there with his back to the door, his hand on the frail wrist of the sick woman.
Wainwright hesitated in the hall, wondering whether it would be intrusion to step inside the front room and put down the doctor’s case and bottle.
Then the doctor turned and saw him, his quick eye noting what he carried, and he stepped quietly out into the hall.
“What more can I do here?” asked Wainwright in a low tone, handing over the doctor’s case. “I’m at your service as long as I can help.”
The doctor gave him a keen glance.
“Thank you,” he said. “I’ll be glad to accept that offer. We need a nurse at once. Could you go and bring her? I don’t want Camilla to leave her mother again. I can’t tell how things are coming out yet. Besides, that woman who rooms upstairs is so incapable, she can’t even boil water.”
“I’ll go,” said Wainwright quickly. “Have you one in mind, or do I hunt one up?”
“Miss York,” said the doctor briefly. “I phoned. She’s free. She’ll be ready when you get there. Here’s the address.”
“All right,” said Wainwright, taking the slip of paper the doctor handed him. “But before I go I must tell you, for I’m afraid Miss Chrystie won’t think of it— You’d better look her over a little. She’s been in a bad accident. Her car was all smashed up. She’s very brave. She insists she’s all right, but she’s just keeping up on her nerve.”
The doctor gave him a quick look.
“You don’t say!” he exclaimed. “I somehow felt I ought not to let her go alone.”
“She didn’t get far alone,” said the young man. “I happened along and saw it all. We picked her up for dead, but she snapped out of it wonderfully and was only anxious to get on with her errand. I’m afraid, though, that she’s about all in, with the shock and anxiety together.”
He gave the details briefly and then went out after the nurse.
It was not a long trip, and the nurse was waiting when he reached her lodgings, so they were soon back at the house again.
Camilla was lying on the couch in the front room when they entered the house; her eyes were closed and her face was wan and white. But her eyes flew open as they came in, and she sat up at once.
Wainwright went toward her and gently pushed her back to the pillow again.
“Please!” he said in a whisper. “You’ll need your strength, you know. You must save yourself. Here’s Miss York. She’ll attend to everything. And I’m here to help her as long as I’m needed. I’m a friend tonight, you know.” And his face lit up with a sweet, gentle smile. Camilla felt again that sense of being protected and cared for in a peculiar way.
“But I must get a room ready for her,” said Camilla anxiously as she yielded to his persuasive hand and lay still on her pillow.
“I can do that,” asserted Wainwright firmly, as though he were quite accustomed to getting rooms ready for people. “What you need is a little rest or there’ll be two patients here instead of one. That wouldn’t be so good, you know.”
He smiled again with a flash of his perfect teeth, and she succumbed.
“But you don’t know where things are,” said Camilla weakly, with a worried pucker on her white brow.
“I can learn, can’t I? Where were you planning to put her?”
“Oh, I don’t know,” said Camilla in a troubled voice. “She’ll have to have the dining room, I suppose. We’ll eat in the kitchen. I wasn’t planning. I didn’t know she was coming. Oh, why did you bring her here? She will be so crowded here! We really haven’t a need for a nurse now I am back.”
“It was the doctor’s orders. I only went after her,” said Wainwright serenely. “He had already phoned for her before we got back. He thought you ought not to be alone when he has to leave. He said there ought to be someone here who knows what to do in an emergency.”
“Oh!” said Camilla with a little sharp breath like a moan, paling at the word emergency.
“Of course, there may not be any emergency. We hope there won’t be,” went on Wainwright with a calm, steady voice and another quieting smile, “but it is always best to provide against one, you know. Now, could you just tell me what needs doing and where to find things? You must promise to lie still and wait till I come for instructions and not get up and run around, or I’ll have to lock you in here till we have things in order.”
There was a twinkle in his eye as he said it, but somehow his firm chin looked as if he really might do it if he were disobeyed. Camilla resigned herself, for the moment at least.
“Well, there’s a cot in the third-story back storeroom. There’s an eiderdown quilt there and two blankets. A pillow, too.”
She glanced at his immaculate evening attire and gave a little moan.
“Oh, you oughtn’t to be doing things like that! Not with that beautiful coat on!” She put her hands together with a little helpless motion. “Oh, please! It distresses me!”
“My coat will come off,” said Wainwright, with a grin, and quickly whipped off, first his handsome overcoat, then his formal evening coat.
She had to smile, he was so like a nice big boy, oblivious to the whiteness of his shirt front.
“Now,” he said, “that’s better! Keep that expression on till I get back. I’m all set for the storeroom on the third floor!”
The words were very low. They did not penetrate to the sickroom, although the door was open. Turning swiftly, he went up the stairs with an incredibly soft tread. Even the creaky stairs were unbelievably silent under his careful strides. It was not long before he was moving down again, bearing a light cot under one arm and an eiderdown quilt in the other.
She was standing in the hall when he returned, holding clean sheets, blankets, and a pillow in a case, which she had taken from the shelves in the hall closet. She motioned him to follow her to the dining room and walked lightly as a feather.
He followed her quietly, but when he had put down the cot and taken the bedclothing from her, laying it on the table, he stopped and picked her up in his arms, as if she had been a blanket, and bore her back to the couch in the front room.
“You are a naughty child!” he whispered. “You must be good, or I shall be forced to stay here and hold you down.”
She looked up and saw a pleasant grin upon his face, but there was something in his eyes and the firm mouth that made her lie back again and relax.
“I’m really quite all right,” she protested.
He stopped and whispered softly in her ear.
“If you will not do it for yourself, won’t you do it for her sake?” He motioned with his head toward the sickroom.
This had an instant effect in the look of fear that came into her eyes. Then after an instant’s quiet she said, “If you’ll just let me get up and make that bed, then I can rest.”
“I can make beds!” he declared earnestly. “I went to military school and learned how!” He grinned, and she succumbed.
He slipped off his shoes and disappeared into the dining room. She heard soft little swishing sounds of a hand on the smooth sheets, but for the most part it was very still. Only the creak of a board in the floor now and then. She raised her head and tried to look through her mother’s room into the dining room to the left. She could see the foot of the cot and a hand tucking the blanket in with military precision, a nice, white, well-groomed hand that did not look as if it had made up a bed in many a day. Then she heard soft footsteps and lay down quickly lest he would return and find her disobeying orders.
The doctor was speaking to the nurse in low professional growls. The nurse on her rubber-shod feet went swiftly to the kitchen. Camilla could hear running water. Wainwright had gone out into the kitchen. She could hear him talking softly to the nurse. Then the doctor went out and the nurse came back. Camilla lay there staring up at the ceiling, glancing now and then into the dimness of her mother’s room, longing to be in there watching the doctor’s face to know just what he was thinking at every passing minute about the possibilities of fear or hope.
Wainwright came back presently. His hair was tossed up over his forehead and again she thought how much he looked like a nice boy.
He stopped and murmured to her like a friend of years. “I’m going out to the drugstore for something the doctor wants. I won’t be gone long. I’ll phone about your car and see that it’s cared for. The doctor wants you to lie still unless he calls you. He says you must rest so you can help the nurse when he has to go. I’ll be back very soon and do anything that’s needed.”
She tried to protest, but he stepped into his shoes, swung on his beautiful overcoat over his vest, and was gone before she could do so. She lay there, still staring at the empty doorway where he had stood for an instant before he closed the front door so carefully after him. Then she turned her gaze back to the room, to the handsome evening coat that lay slumped across a chair as if it were perfectly at home. She thought of the strange happenings of the evening, like a dream, with a great fear standing grimly in the background and Wainwright like a strong angel dominating everything. She thought how strange it was for his coat to be lying there across their shabby little armchair; he a stranger from another world than theirs! How kind he was! How like a tried friend! And he was an absolute stranger. She didn’t know a thing about him except his name, a name she had never heard before! What would her mother say to it all? Would she live to know about it?
Then fear came back and held her heart again until it quivered, and she prayed an agonized, wordless prayer.
She must have closed her eyes while she prayed, for when she opened them again it was with a sense of a strong breath of air from outdoors having blown in her face. The light was turned out in the front room where she lay, and it seemed a long time afterward. But when she looked in a fright toward her mother’s room she could see the nurse coming with a glass in her hand, and then she sensed Wainwright standing near her looking down at her. Their eyes met in the dimness of the room, and he smiled. He had a kind look in his eyes, and he stooped over her and put two fingers gently on her wrist for a moment.
“Oh yes.” She stirred softly and tried to rise. “I am quite rested now! I must go to Mother! And you should go home and get some sleep. You have been so good!”
He shook his head and stooped to speak in her ear. “Your mother is resting comfortably now. The doctor thinks there has been a shade of improvement. I’m staying awhile out there in the hall. If you want me, just give a soft little cough and I’ll come. And don’t worry about your car. They’re taking care of it. It’s gone to a garage.”
He drifted away like one of the shadows in the room. She stared around her and wondered if he, too, had been a dream. Then she noticed the big chair was gone and his evening coat was slung across the top of the piano as if it had been a day laborer’s coat. Still marveling, between wakefulness and sleeping, she fell asleep. She did not even hear the milk wagons when they began their rounds nor the bread wagons a little later when they went clop, clop, clopping down the icy street. It was broad daylight when she woke with a start and heard the water running in the kitchen sink. She threw aside the coverings and got up quickly, thoroughly awake now and alive to duty and anxiety.
She hurried out into the hall softly with a fearsome glance toward her mother’s room where the shades were drawn, keeping out the brightness of the morning. She could not see into the dim darkness of the room; her eyes were not yet accustomed to the light of day.
She wondered as she crossed the room how her shoes came to be off and where they were, and then she came into the dimness of the hall and saw Wainwright slumped down in the old Morris chair, his overcoat around him and his hair tossed back in disorder. He was asleep, and his face looked white and tired and boyish. He had stayed all night! How wonderful! But what an obligation to have to a stranger!
But before she could pass him, he had roused and caught her hand as she would have gone by.
“Good morning!” he whispered. “Are you all right, Camilla?” He did not seem to speak her name as if he felt himself a stranger.
She caught her breath softly.
“I’m fine,” she answered, “but—my mother! How is she? Oh, I shouldn’t have gone to sleep!”
“She’s better!” he said with a light of eagerness in his eyes almost as if she might have been his mother. “Sleep was just what you should have done. Come out in the kitchen where we can talk.”
He took her hand and led her through the dining room, and she did not realize that they were walking hand in hand until they came sharply upon the nurse washing a cup and plate. But she did not seem to think it strange. She said good morning in a businesslike tone and then, “Well, your mother is better, Miss Chrystie!”
“Oh!” Camilla caught her breath and closed her eyes for an instant, a light coming into her face. “Could I go to her?”
“No, she’s sleeping quite naturally now, and the doctor said she shouldn’t be disturbed. He’s gone to another operation, and he’ll be back again in about two hours to see how we’re getting on.”
“Oh, I should have been here to get him some breakfast!” said Camilla, aghast.
“Oh no you shouldn’t!” said the nurse capably. “I made him some coffee and toast and scrambled him some eggs. Now you can get yourself and Mr. Wainwright some breakfast. I’ve had all I want. Mr. Wainwright has been invaluable. I don’t know what we should have done without him.”
Camilla turned to Wainwright with gratitude and apology in her eyes. “Oh, how terrible for me to sleep through everything and you, a stranger, doing it all.”
Wainwright ran his fingers through his hair and turned around on her sharply, blinking at her through big, blue, pleasant eyes.
“What did you say I was, young lady?” he asked, catching hold of her wrists and looking her straight in the eyes.
Camilla, her heart suddenly light, looked up with ashamedly sweet smile on her white young face.
“I said you were a—friend,” she said shyly.
He gave her hand a quick warm clasp.
“Thank you for those kind words!” he said. “Remember, I’m a young fellow taking his tests and mighty anxious to pass muster.”
Then he let her go, but not without another look that seemed somehow to cement a friendship that she knew no way to prevent.
It was when they were sitting across from each other at the white enameled kitchen table eating scrambled eggs and drinking coffee together cozily that she summoned words again to protest gratefully all he had done for her and to deplore the fact that he had been up all night.
“This isn’t the first time I’ve eaten in a kitchen at an early hour in the morning,” he said gravely. “I’ve often danced all night and ended up with scrambled eggs in the morning, but I can’t say they ever tasted so good as these do. And I can tell you truly that I’ve had more satisfaction out of this night than I ever had out of any of those other nights. I’m so very glad your mother is better!”
She looked at him, startled as his words gave her evidence of even more differences between them than she had envisioned. Yes, of course he would belong to a world like that! A fashionable world, with all it stood for today! His coat might have told her that, and the gardenia in his buttonhole. There was a strange little uneasy twinge as she took that in and put it away for future thought.
And yet, it was all the more wonderful that he had stayed and been so fine and worked so hard when he came of an entirely different world! She would not let his kindness and friendship for that one night be spoiled or discounted in the least by any differences there might be in their worlds. Whatever he was or had been or was to be, he had been great last night, and had a right to be called a friend.
He even helped her wipe their few dishes, as if he had been her playmate from childhood. She knew it couldn’t last, of course. It would be over like a dream—with this difference: it was a dream that she never would forget.
When he went away at last, after the doctor had returned and pronounced the mother out of immediate danger, he had his overcoat well buttoned up to hide his evening attire. But he came back immediately from his car with a big, long, white box in his hand and a nice grin on his face.
Camilla, from the window, had been watching him away and hurried to the door as she saw him return.
“Won’t you relieve me of these flowers?” he asked, with a funny, wry smile. “The occasion for them is past, and I wouldn’t know how to dispose of them. Perhaps your mother will enjoy them.”
“Oh,” said Camilla, with a conscience-stricken look. “I’ve kept you from so much!” And then as the box was put in her hands she said, “And somebody has been missing you, and missing these, and wondering! I do hope you telephoned and explained.”
She lifted her eyes and saw a strange, puzzled look on his face.
“No,” he said thoughtfully, “I didn’t explain. I don’t know that I shall. And I wasn’t sure that I was going to use those flowers when I bought them. I think it was a good thing that I didn’t!”
Then with a smile he was gone.
Camilla watched his car glide out from the curb where it had stood through the night, saw his lifted hand in adieu, and turned back to the house with wonder in her eyes and a thoughtful countenance. She went out to the kitchen with the big box to be alone and think this out.
But when she opened the box there were large white orchids! And suddenly her problem was complicated by the vision of a third person, the girl for whom these strange white flowers had been bought! What was she? Who was she? His friend? His sweetheart? His wife perhaps!
The distance between her world and the world of the stranger who had befriended her in her need was widening fast, and daylight was upon her. There was no more time for dreams.
Then suddenly the nurse called her, and she left the white flowers in water hastily drawn in the bread bowl and went to meet the doctor.
White orchids in a yellow bread bowl!