<h2 id="c19">CHAPTER XIX. <br/><span class="small">THE LOST IS FOUND</span></h2>
<p>Kathryn crossed to the one window and drew
up the shade. It was late afternoon and almost dusk
on that north side of the house. The dim light
revealed on the pillow a face so still and white that
Bobs was sure only death could make it so. For one
long moment she gazed before she recognized the
girl lying on the bed, and no wonder, for great was
the change in her.</p>
<p>“Gwen! It’s our own Sister Gwen!” she cried
as one who can scarcely believe the evidence of her
senses.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_159">[159]</div>
<p>Down by the bedside Roberta knelt and took one
of the lifeless white hands in her own. “Oh, Gwen,”
she implored, “why did you do it? You thought we
didn’t want you. You believed that in all the world
there was no one who loved you, no home in which
you were welcome. Oh, how selfish I’ve been! Gwen,
forgive me, Sister. I should have tried to help you.
I was the one really who was selfish, for I wanted
adventure. I didn’t try to think what it would mean
to you; but O, I will, I will, Gwen, if only you will
live. Why don’t you open your eyes, Gwen?”</p>
<p>Then, as there was no response from the apparently
lifeless form on the bed, Bobs looked up at her
friend as she implored: “Kathryn, why doesn’t Gwen
open her eyes? Are we too late? O, don’t say that
we are. It will kill Glow. She thinks that it is her
fault that Gwen left. She feels that she turned one
of Mother’s own daughters out of our home.”</p>
<p>Kathryn, who had been hunting about the room
as though in search of something, as indeed she had
been, gave an exclamation of relief and, going to
Bobs, she held out a small vial. “Gwen isn’t dead,”
she said. “It wasn’t poison that she took. Just a
heavy dose of sleeping powder. However, she will
probably continue in this deathlike sleep for hours,
and yet she may soon recover. We have no time to
delay. I will remain here while you go to the corner
drug store and telephone to my hospital for an ambulance.
Just say that it is for Miss De Laney and
they will respond at once. While she is unable to
protest, we will take her to your home.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_160">[160]</div>
<p>Bobs had arisen, but lovingly she stooped and
kissed the white face that was so unlike the proud,
beautiful one she had last seen on that never-to-be-forgotten
day when they had planned leaving their
Long Island home.</p>
<p>Tears fell unheeded as Roberta whispered to ears
that could not hear: “And when you waken, Sister
dear, you will be in a home that wants you, and our
Gloria, who has tried to be Mother to us all these
years will be at your side smiling down, and a new
life will begin for you and for us all.”</p>
<p>Then, almost blinded by her tears, Roberta descended
the long, dark flight of stairs and telephoned
not only to the hospital, but also to Gloria, telling
her the wonderful news and bidding her prepare
Bobs’ own room for the sister who was coming
home.</p>
<p>Two hours later Gwendolyn, who had not awakened,
was lying in the comfortable bed in Bobs’
room. Her three sisters and their friend, Kathryn
De Laney, stood watching her in the shaded lamp-light.
The expression on the face of Gloria told
more than words could have done what it meant to
her to have this one of her dear mother’s daughters
back in the home.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_161">[161]</div>
<p>“And a real home it is going to be to her from
now on if patient love can make it so,” Gloria said.
Then to the nurse she turned, asking, “Will it be
long before she wakens, Kathryn?”</p>
<p>“It ought not to be long,” was the reply, which
had hardly been given when Roberta whispered
eagerly, “Glow, I think Gwen moved.”</p>
<p>The eyes that looked so wearily out at them were
about to close as though nothing mattered, when
suddenly they were again opened with a brightening
expression, and yet they did not look quite natural.</p>
<p>Holding out her arms toward the oldest sister,
the girl on the bed cried eagerly: “Mother, I have
come to you after all. I took something. I wanted
to come——” Her voice trailed away and again she
closed her eyes.</p>
<p>Gloria was the one of the girls who looked most
like their mother. “Dear, dear Sister,” Glow said,
trying not to sob, “you are home again. I am sure
that our mother led us to you. Try to get strong.
We will help you, Gwendolyn, for truly we love you.
No one knows, little Gwen, how your big sister has
wanted you. Can’t you try to forgive me for having
spoken impatiently, if not for my sake, at least for
the sake of our mother?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_162">[162]</div>
<p>Gwendolyn looked at the face bent close above
her as though trying to recall the past. Then, reaching
out a frail hand, she said, “I, Glow, am the one
who should be forgiven.”</p>
<p>Then she closed her eyes, and a moment later
Kathryn said that she was asleep, but that this time
it was a natural sleep from great weariness.</p>
<p>“When she wakens again, give her broth, for I
fear she is too nearly starved to take heavier food
just now.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_163">[163]</div>
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