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<h2> XII. ALMOST </h2>
<p>"This is your patient. Your new nurse, my dear. What did you say your name
is? Miss Ayers?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Mr. Grey, Alice Ayers."</p>
<p>"Oh, what a sweet name!"</p>
<p>This expressive greeting, from the patient herself, was the first
heart-sting I received,—a sting which brought a flush into my cheek
which I would fain have kept down.</p>
<p>"Since a change of nurses was necessary, I am glad they sent me one like
you," the feeble, but musical voice went on, and I saw a wasted but eager
hand stretched out.</p>
<p>In a whirl of strong feeling I advanced to take it. I had not counted on
such a reception. I had not expected any bond of congeniality to spring up
between this high-feeling English girl and myself to make my purpose
hateful to me. Yet, as I stood there looking down at her bright if wasted
face, I felt that it would be very easy to love so gentle and cordial a
being, and dreaded raising my eyes to the gentleman at my side lest I
should see something in him to hamper me, and make this attempt, which I
had undertaken in such loyalty of spirit, a misery to myself and
ineffectual to the man I had hoped to save by it. When I did look up and
catch the first beams of Mr. Grey's keen blue eyes fixed inquiringly on
me, I neither knew what to think nor how to act. He was tall and firmly
knit, and had an intellectual aspect altogether. I was conscious of
regarding him with a decided feeling of awe, and found myself forgetting
why I had come there, and what my suspicions were,—suspicions which
had carried hope with them, hope for myself and hope for my lover, who
would never escape the opprobrium, even if he did the punishment, of this
great crime, were this, the only other person who could possibly be
associated with it, found to be the fine, clear-souled man he appeared to
be in this my first interview with him.</p>
<p>Perceiving very soon that his apprehensions in my regard were limited to a
fear lest I should not feel at ease in my new home under the restraint of
a presence more accustomed to intimidate than attract strangers, I threw
aside all doubts of myself and met the advances of both father and
daughter with that quiet confidence which my position there demanded.</p>
<p>The result both gratified and grieved me. As a nurse entering on her first
case I was happy; as a woman with an ulterior object in view verging on
the audacious and unspeakable, I was wretched and regretful and just a
little shaken in the conviction which had hitherto upheld me.</p>
<p>I was therefore but poorly prepared to meet the ordeal which awaited me,
when, a little later in the day, Mr. Grey called me into the adjoining
room, and, after saying that it would afford him great relief to go out
for an hour or so, asked if I were afraid to be left alone with my
patient.</p>
<p>"O no, sir—" I began, but stopped in secret dismay. I was afraid,
but not on account of her condition; rather on account of my own. What if
I should be led into betraying my feelings on finding myself under no
other eye than her own! What if the temptation to probe her poor sick mind
should prove stronger than my duty toward her as a nurse!</p>
<p>My tones were hesitating but Mr. Grey paid little heed; his mind was too
fixed on what he wished to say himself.</p>
<p>"Before I go," said he, "I have a request to make—I may as well say
a caution to give you. Do not, I pray, either now or at any future time,
carry or allow any one else to carry newspapers into Miss Grey's room.
They are just now too alarming. There has been, as you know, a dreadful
murder in this city. If she caught one glimpse of the headlines, or saw so
much as the name of Fairbrother—which—which is a name she
knows, the result might be very hurtful to her. She is not only extremely
sensitive from illness but from temperament. Will you be careful?"</p>
<p>"I shall be careful."</p>
<p>It was such an effort for me to say these words, to say anything in the
state of mind into which I had been thrown by his unexpected allusion to
this subject, that I unfortunately drew his attention to myself and it was
with what I felt to be a glance of doubt that he added with decided
emphasis:</p>
<p>"You must consider this whole subject as a forbidden one in this family.
Only cheerful topics are suitable for the sick-room. If Miss Grey attempts
to introduce any other, stop her. Do not let her talk about anything which
will not be conducive to her speedy recovery. These are the only
instructions I have to give you; all others must come from her physician."</p>
<p>I made some reply with as little show of emotion as possible. It seemed to
satisfy him, for his face cleared as he kindly observed:</p>
<p>"You have a very trustworthy look for one so young. I shall rest easy
while you are with her, and I shall expect you to be always with her when
I am not. Every moment, mind. She is never to be left alone with gossiping
servants. If a word is mentioned in her hearing about this crime which
seems to be in everybody's mouth, I shall feel forced, greatly as I should
regret the fad, to blame you."</p>
<p>This was a heart-stroke, but I kept up bravely, changing color perhaps,
but not to such a marked degree as to arouse any deeper suspicion in his
mind than that I had been wounded in my amour propre.</p>
<p>"She shall be well guarded," said I. "You may trust me to keep from her
all avoidable knowledge of this crime."</p>
<p>He bowed and I was about to leave his presence, when he detained me by
remarking with the air of one who felt that some explanation was
necessary:</p>
<p>"I was at the ball where this crime took place. Naturally it has made a
deep impression on me and would on her if she heard of it."</p>
<p>"Assuredly," I murmured, wondering if he would say more and how I should
have the courage to stand there and listen if he did.</p>
<p>"It is the first time I have ever come in contact with crime," he went on
with what, in one of his reserved nature, seemed a hardly natural
insistence. "I could well have been spared the experience. A tragedy with
which one has been even thus remotely connected produces a lasting effect
upon the mind."</p>
<p>"Oh yes, oh yes!" I murmured, edging involuntarily toward the door. Did I
not know? Had I not been there, too; I, little I, whom he stood gazing
down upon from such a height, little realizing the fatality which united
us and, what was even a more overwhelming thought to me at the moment, the
fact that of all persons in the world the shrinking little being, into
whose eyes he was then looking, was, perhaps, his greatest enemy and the
one person, great or small, from whom he had the most to fear.</p>
<p>But I was no enemy to his gentle daughter and the relief I felt at finding
myself thus cut off by my own promise from even the remotest communication
with her on this forbidden subject was genuine and sincere.</p>
<p>But the father! What was I to think of the father? Alas! I could have but
one thought, admirable as he appeared in all lights save the one in which
his too evident connection with this crime had placed him. I spent the
hours of the afternoon in alternately watching the sleeping face of my
patient, too sweetly calm in its repose, or so it seemed, for the mind
beneath to harbor such doubts as were shown in the warning I had ascribed
to her, and vain efforts to explain by any other hypothesis than that of
guilt, the extraordinary evidence which linked this man of great affairs
and the loftiest repute to a crime involving both theft and murder.</p>
<p>Nor did the struggle end that night. It was renewed with still greater
positiveness the next day, as I witnessed the glances which from time to
time passed between this father and daughter,—glances full of doubt
and question on both sides, but not exactly such doubt or such question as
my suspicions called for. Or so I thought, and spent another day or two
hesitating very much over my duty, when, coming unexpectedly upon Mr. Grey
one evening, I felt all my doubts revive in view of the extraordinary
expression of dread—I might with still greater truth say fear—which
informed his features and made them, to my unaccustomed eyes, almost
unrecognizable.</p>
<p>He was sitting at his desk in reverie over some papers which he seemed not
to have touched for hours, and when, at some movement I made, he started
up and met my eye, I could swear that his cheek was pale, the firm
carriage of his body shaken, and the whole man a victim to some strong and
secret apprehension he vainly sought to hide, when I ventured to tell him
what I wanted, he made an effort and pulled himself together, but I had
seen him with his mask off, and his usually calm visage and self-possessed
mien could not again deceive me.</p>
<p>My duties kept me mainly at Miss Grey's bedside, but I had been provided
with a little room across the hall, and to this room I retired very soon
after this, for rest and a necessary understanding with myself.</p>
<p>For, in spite of this experience and my now settled convictions, my
purpose required whetting. The indescribable charm, the extreme refinement
and nobility of manner observable in both Mr. Grey and his daughter were
producing their effect. I felt guilty; constrained. whatever my
convictions, the impetus to act was leaving me. How could I recover it? By
thinking of Anson Durand and his present disgraceful position.</p>
<p>Anson Durand! Oh, how the feeling surged up in my breast as that name
slipped from my lips on crossing the threshold of my little room! Anson
Durand, whom I believed innocent, whom I loved, but whom I was betraying
with every moment of hesitation in which I allowed myself to indulge! what
if the Honorable Mr. Grey is an eminent statesman, a dignified, scholarly,
and to all appearance, high-minded man? what if my patient is sweet,
dove-eyed and affectionate? Had not Anson qualities as excellent in their
way, rights as certain, and a hold upon myself superior to any claims
which another might advance? Drawing a much-crumpled little note from my
pocket, I eagerly read it. It was the only one I had of his writing, the
only letter he had ever written me. I had already re-read it a hundred
times, but as I once more repeated to myself its well-known lines, I felt
my heart grow strong and fixed in the determination which had brought me
into this family.</p>
<p>Restoring the letter to its place, I opened my gripsack and from its
inmost recesses drew forth an object which I had no sooner in hand than a
natural sense of disquietude led me to glance apprehensively, first at the
door, then at the window, though I had locked the one and shaded the
other. It seemed as if some other eye besides my own must be gazing at
what I held so gingerly in hand; that the walls were watching me, if
nothing else, and the sensation this produced was so exactly like that of
guilt (or what I imagined to be guilt), that I was forced to repeat once
more to myself that it was not a good man's overthrow I sought, or even a
bad man's immunity from punishment, but the truth, the absolute truth. No
shame could equal that which I should feel if, by any over-delicacy now, I
failed to save the man who trusted me.</p>
<p>The article which I held—have you guessed it?—was the stiletto
with which Mrs. Fairbrother had been killed. It had been intrusted to me
by the police for a definite purpose. The time for testing that purpose
had come, or so nearly come, that I felt I must be thinking about the
necessary ways and means.</p>
<p>Unwinding the folds of tissue paper in which the stiletto was wrapped, I
scrutinized the weapon very carefully. Hitherto, I had seen only pictures
of it, now, I had the article itself in my hand. It was not a natural one
for a young woman to hold, a woman whose taste ran more toward healing
than inflicting wounds, but I forced myself to forget why the end of its
blade was rusty, and looked mainly at the devices which ornamented the
handle. I had not been mistaken in them. They belonged to the house of
Grey, and to none other. It was a legitimate inquiry I had undertaken.
However the matter ended, I should always have these historic devices for
my excuse.</p>
<p>My plan was to lay this dagger on Mr. Grey's desk at a moment when he
would be sure to see it and I to see him. If he betrayed a guilty
knowledge of this fatal steel; if, unconscious of my presence, he showed
surprise and apprehension,—then we should know how to proceed;
justice would be loosed from constraint and the police feel at liberty to
approach him. It was a delicate task, this. I realized how delicate, when
I had thrust the stiletto out of sight under my nurse's apron and started
to cross the hall. Should I find the library clear? Would the opportunity
be given me to approach his desk, or should I have to carry this guilty
witness of a world-famous crime on into Miss Grey's room, and with its
unholy outline pressing a semblance of itself upon my breast, sit at that
innocent pillow, meet those innocent eyes, and answer the gentle inquiries
which now and then fell from the sweetest lips I have ever seen smile into
the face of a lonely, preoccupied stranger?</p>
<p>The arrangement of the rooms was such as made it necessary for me to pass
through this sitting-room in order to reach my patient's bedroom.</p>
<p>With careful tread, so timed as not to appear stealthy, I accordingly
advanced and pushed open the door. The room was empty. Mr. Grey was still
with his daughter and I could cross the floor without fear. But never had
I entered upon a task requiring more courage or one more obnoxious to my
natural instincts. I hated each step I took, but I loved the man for whom
I took those steps, and moved resolutely on. Only, as I reached the chair
in which Mr. Grey was accustomed to sit, I found that it was easier to
plan an action than to carry it out. Home life and the domestic virtues
had always appealed to me more than a man's greatness. The position which
this man held in his own country, his usefulness there, even his prestige
as statesman and scholar, were facts, but very dreamy facts, to me, while
his feelings as a father, the place he held in his daughter's heart—these
were real to me, these I could understand; and it was of these and not of
his place as a man, that this his favorite seat spoke to me. How often had
I beheld him sit by the hour with his eye on the door behind which his one
darling lay ill! Even now, it was easy for me to recall his face as I had
sometimes caught a glimpse of it through the crack of the suddenly opened
door, and I felt my breast heave and my hand falter as I drew forth the
stiletto and moved to place it where his eye would fall upon it on his
leaving his daughter's bedside.</p>
<p>But my hand returned quickly to my breast and fell hack again empty. A
pile of letters lay before me on the open lid of the desk. The top one was
addressed to me with the word "Important" written in the corner. I did not
know the writing, but I felt that I should open and read this letter
before committing myself or those who stood back of me to this desperate
undertaking.</p>
<p>Glancing behind me and seeing that the door into Miss Grey's room was
ajar, I caught up this letter and rushed with it back into my own room. As
I surmised, it was from the inspector, and as I read it I realized that I
had received it not one moment too soon. In language purposely
non-committal, but of a meaning not to be mistaken, it advised me that
some unforeseen facts had come to light which altered all former
suspicions and made the little surprise I had planned no longer necessary.</p>
<p>There was no allusion to Mr. Durand but the final sentence ran:</p>
<p>"Drop all care and give your undivided attention to your patient."</p>
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