FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   151   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   161   162   163   164   165   166   167   168   169   170   171   172   173   174   175  
176   177   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   >>  
But there were some things that even the little doctor could not say. "Still there, Mr. O'Neill?" he asked a little later. "Yes. Where is Brian now?" "In a quarry shack on what we call up here the Finlake mountain." "Finlake mountain!" "Yes, barely eighteen miles across the valley from the farm. They couldn't find a doctor. Carson is nearer but he was out. Has a widely scattered farm practice like my own and Don, frantic with terror, telephoned to me. We've done everything possible for him, Mr. O'Neill, but his pulse is pretty feeble and it's difficult to rouse him. Sensibility of course is blunted. Bound to be--" "I will be there," said Kenny, "as soon--as soon as it is possible. There are but three north-bound trains at Briston?" "Morning--eight-ten. Noon, one-twenty-nine and night, seven-fifteen. But don't get off at Briston, Mr. O'Neill. Finlake, fifteen miles on, is nearer--" "I can not possibly make the morning train. The changes make the trip long. Twelve hours. . . . God!" "I myself will meet you at Finlake. It's three miles farther to the quarry. If you are not on the noon train I will meet the night--" "I--I cannot thank you, Doctor Cole." Kenny hung up, unaware that the doctor was adding further detail. Almost at once he unhooked the receiver and summoned the club central. Afterward Pietro, who took his turn at the switchboard when the day operator departed, spoke of the quiet curtness of his voice. "Pietro? Mr. O'Neill speaking. I want you, at once, to look up the earliest connecting train with Finlake, Pennsylvania, any road." "Yes, sir," began Pietro. "What--" but the receiver had clicked into place. Kenny stared with a shudder at the withered fern, his face as white as chalk. A tearing hand seemed clinging to his brain. In the face of this grief-stricken terror that quaked and burned in his soul, etching unforgettable scars, the recollection of his unsteady spurts of penance rose to mock him with their artificiality. His remorse had been but a pale, theatric spree! And now in this forgetful winter of his love, Fate had decoyed him into optimistic quietude only to thrust savagely and deep. Remorse in the raw! Was it punishment--punishment for the farcical penitent on the highway who had smiled into a woman's soft eyes, forgetting-- He answered Pietro's ring with a throbbing sense of confusion in his forehead. The best connecting train and the e
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   151   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   161   162   163   164   165   166   167   168   169   170   171   172   173   174   175  
176   177   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   >>  



Top keywords:
Finlake
 

Pietro

 

doctor

 
fifteen
 
terror
 
nearer
 

receiver

 

quarry

 

Briston

 

mountain


connecting
 
punishment
 

clinging

 

tearing

 

stared

 

speaking

 

earliest

 

Pennsylvania

 

curtness

 

departed


switchboard
 

shudder

 

withered

 
clicked
 

operator

 
farcical
 
penitent
 

highway

 

smiled

 

Remorse


quietude

 

thrust

 
savagely
 
confusion
 

forehead

 
throbbing
 

forgetting

 

answered

 

optimistic

 

decoyed


spurts

 

unsteady

 
penance
 

recollection

 
burned
 
quaked
 

etching

 

unforgettable

 
artificiality
 

forgetful