<h2>CHAPTER XXIX<br/> <small>Anxious Days</small></h2>
<p class='drop-cap'>FOR the next few weeks the Cottagers led
as quiet a life as almost daily association
with Henrietta would permit. Jean
grew a trifle taller, Marjory discovered new
ways of doing her hair and Mabel remained
as round and ruddy as ever. But everybody
was worried about Bettie. She seemed
listless and indifferent in school, she fell
asleep over her books when she attempted to
study at night, she grew averse to getting
up mornings and day by day she grew thinner
and paler, until even heedless Mabel observed
that she was all eyes.</p>
<p>"What's the trouble?" asked Jean, when
Bettie said that she didn't feel like going to
the Public Library corner to view the Uncle
Tom's Cabin parade. "A walk would do
you good, and it's only four blocks."</p>
<p></p>
<p>"I'm tired," returned Bettie. "My head
would like to go but my feet would rather
not. And my hands don't want to do anything—or
even my tongue. You can tell me
about the parade—that'll be easier than looking
at it."</p>
<p>Now, this was a new Bettie. The old one,
while not exactly a noisy person, had been so
active physically that the others had sometimes
found it difficult to follow her dancing
footsteps. She had ever been quick to wait
on the other members of her large family;
or to do errands, in the most obliging
fashion, for any of her friends. This new
Bettie eyed the Tucker cat sympathetically
when it mewed for milk; but she relegated
the task of feeding pussy to one of her much
more unwilling small brothers.</p>
<p>"She needs a tonic," said Mrs. Tucker,
giving Bettie dark-brown doses from a large
bottle. "It's the spring, I guess."</p>
<p>Two days after the parade there was great
excitement among Bettie's friends. She
had not appeared at school. That in itself
was not an unusual occurrence, for Bettie
often stayed at home to help her overburdened
mother through particularly trying
days; but when Jean stopped in to consult
her little friend about homemade valentines,
Mrs. Tucker met her with the news that
Bettie was sick in bed.</p>
<p>"Can't I see her?" asked Jean.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid not," replied Mrs. Tucker,
who looked worried. "She's asleep just
now and she has a temperature."</p>
<p>When Mabel heard this latter fact she at
once consulted Dr. Bennett.</p>
<p>"Father," she queried, "do folks ever die
of temperature?"</p>
<p>"Why, yes," returned the Doctor. "If
the temperature is below zero they sometimes
freeze. Why?"</p>
<p>"Mrs. Tucker says that's what Bettie's
got—temperature."</p>
<p>"It isn't a disease, child. It's a condition
of heat or cold. But it's too soon to say
anything about Bettie—go play with your
dolls."</p>
<p>Henrietta and the remaining Cottagers
immediately thought of lovely things to do
for Bettie. So, too, did Mr. Black. Impulsive
Henrietta purchased a large box of
most attractive candy, Jean made her a
lovely sponge cake that sat down rather
sadly in the middle but rose nobly at both
ends; Mabel begged half a lemon pie from
the cook; Marjory concocted a wonderful
bowl of orange jelly with candied cherries on
top, Mrs. Crane made a steaming pitcherful
of chicken soup and Mr. Black sent in a
great basket of the finest fruit that the Lakeville
market afforded.</p>
<p>But when all these successive and well-meaning
visitors presented themselves and
their unstinted offerings at the Rectory door,
Dr. Tucker received them sadly.</p>
<p>"Bettie is down with a fever," said he.
"She can't eat <i>anything</i>."</p>
<p>The days that followed were the most
dreadful that the Cottagers had ever known.
They lived in suspense. Day after day
when they asked for news of Bettie the response
was usually, "Just about the same."
Occasionally, however, Dr. Bennett shook
his head dubiously and said, "Not quite so
well to-day."</p>
<p>For weeks—for <i>years</i> it seemed to the disheartened
children—these were the only tidings
that reached them from the sick-room.
There was a trained nurse whose white cap
sometimes gleamed in an upper window, the
grave-faced, uncommunicative doctor visited
the house twice a day, a boy with parcels from
the drug store could frequently be seen entering
the Rectory gate and that was about all
that the terribly interested friends could
learn concerning their beloved Bettie. They
spent most of their time hovering quietly
and forlornly about Mrs. Mapes's doorstep,
for that particular spot furnished the best
view of the afflicted Rectory. They wanted,
poor little souls, to keep as close to Bettie as
possible. If the sun shone during this time,
they did not know it; for all the days seemed
dark and miserable.</p>
<p>"If we could only help a little," mourned
Jean, who looked pale and anxious, "it
wouldn't be so bad."</p>
<p>"I teased her," sighed Henrietta, repentantly,
"only two days before she was taken
sick. I do wish I hadn't."</p>
<p>"I gave her the smaller half of my
orange," lamented Mabel, "the very last
time I saw her. If—if I don't ever see—see
her again——"</p>
<p>"Oh, well," comforted Marjory, hastily,
"she might have been just that much sicker
if she'd eaten the larger piece. But <i>I</i> wish
I hadn't talked so much about boarding
school. It always worried her and sometimes
I tried [Marjory blushed guiltily at
the remembrance] to make her just a little
envious."</p>
<p>"I'm afraid," confessed Jean, "I sometimes
neglected her just a little for Henrietta;
but I mean to make up for it if—if I
have a chance."</p>
<p>"That's it," breathed Marjory, softly, "if
we only have a chance."</p>
<p>Then, because the March wind wailed forlornly,
because the waiting had been so long
and because it seemed to the discouraged
children as if the chance, after all, were extremely
slight—as slight and frail a thing as
poor little Bettie herself—the four friends
sat very quietly for many minutes on the
rail of the Mapes's broad porch, with big
tears flowing down their cheeks. Presently
Mabel fell to sobbing outright.</p>
<p>Mr. Black, on his way home from his
office, found them there. He had meant to
salute them in his usual friendly fashion, but
at sight of their disconsolate faces he merely
glanced at them inquiringly.</p>
<p>"She's—she's just about the same,"
sobbed Jean.</p>
<p>Mr. Black, without a word, proceeded on
his way; but all the sparkle had vanished
from his dark eyes and his countenance
seemed older. He, too, was unhappy on Bettie's
account and he lived in hourly dread of
unfavorable news. The very next morning,
however, there was a more hopeful air about
Dr. Bennett when he left the Rectory.
Mabel, waiting at home, questioned him
mutely with her eyes.</p>
<p>"A very slight change for the better,"
said he, "but it is too soon for us to be sure
of anything. We're not out of the woods
yet."</p>
<p>Next came the tidings that Bettie was
really improving, though not at all rapidly;
yet it was something to know that she was
started on the road to recovery.</p>
<p>Perhaps the tedious days that followed
were the most trying days of all, however,
for the impatient children; because the
"road to recovery" in Bettie's case seemed
such a tremendously long road that her little
friends began to fear that Bettie would
never come into sight at the end of it, but
she did at last. And such a forlorn Bettie
as she was!</p>
<p>She had certainly been very ill. They had
shaved her poor little head, her eyes seemed
almost twice their usual size and the girls
had not believed that any living person could
become so pitiably thin; but the wasting
fever was gone and what was left of Bettie
was still alive.</p>
<p>Long before the invalid was able to sit up,
the girls had been admitted one by one and
at different times, to take a look at her.
Bettie had smiled at them. She had even
made a feeble little joke about being able to
count every one of her two hundred bones.</p>
<p>After a time, Bettie could sit up in bed.
A few days later, rolled in a gaily flowered
quilt presented by the women of the parish;
she occupied a big, pillowed chair near the
window; and all four of the girls were able
to throw kisses to her from Jean's porch.
And now she could eat a few spoonfuls of
Mrs. Crane's savory broth, a very little of
Marjory's orange jelly and one or two of
Mr. Black's imported grapes. But, for a
long, long time, Bettie progressed no further
than the chair.</p>
<p>"I don't know what ails that child," confessed
puzzled Dr. Bennett. "She's like a
piece of elastic with all the stretch gone from
the rubber. She seems to lack something;
not exactly vitality—animation, perhaps, or
ambition. Yes, she certainly lacks ambition.
She ought to be outdoors by now."</p>
<p>"Hurry and get well," urged Jean, who
had been instructed to try to rouse her too-slowly-improving
friend. "The weather's
warmer every day and it won't be long before
we can open Dandelion Cottage. And
we've sworn a tremendous vow not to show
Henrietta—she's crazy to see it—a single
inch of that house until you're able to trot
over with us. Here's the key. You're to
keep it until you're ready to unlock that door
yourself."</p>
<p>"Drop it into that vase," directed Bettie.
"It seems a hundred miles to that cottage,
and I'll never have legs enough to walk so
far."</p>
<p>"Two are enough," encouraged Jean.</p>
<p>"Both of mine," mourned Bettie, displaying
a wrinkled stocking, "wouldn't make a
whole one."</p>
<p>"Mrs. Slater wants to take you to drive
every day, just as soon as you are able to
wear clothes. She told me to tell you."</p>
<p>"It seems a fearfully long way to the
stepping stone," sighed Bettie. "Go home,
please. It's makes me tired to <i>think</i> of
driving."</p>
<p>"There's certainly something amiss with
Bettie," said Dr. Bennett, when told of this
interview. "Some little spring in her seems
broken. We must find it and mend it or we
won't have any Bettie."</p>
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