can do it so that it won’t show. There’s so much of it.”
“Please,” she answered, yielding.
He was deft. She sat quiet and soothed under his ministerings. Completed, the bandage looked not too unworkmanlike, and was cool and comforting to the hot throb of the wound.
“Our doctor went back on the train, worse luck!” he said.
“I don’t want any other doctor,” she murmured. “I’d rather have you.”
“But I’m not a doctor.”
“No,” she acquiesced. “Who are you? Did you tell me? You are one of the passengers, aren’t you?”
“I’m the station-agent at Manzanita.”
For a moment she looked at him wonderingly. “Are you? I don’t seem to understand. My head is very queer.”
“Don’t try to. Here’s some tea and crackers.”
“I’m starved,” she said.
With subtle stirrings of delight, he watched her eat the bit that he had prepared for her while heating the water. But he was wise enough to know that she must not have much while the extent of her injury was still undetermined.
“Are you wet?” he inquired.
She nodded. “I haven’t been dry since the flood.”
“I have a room with a real stove in it over the station. I’ll build a fire, and you must take off your wet things and go to bed and sleep. If you need anything you can hammer on the floor.”
“But you—”
“I’ll be in my office, below. I’m on night duty to-night,” said he, tactfully fabricating.
“Very well. You’re awfully kind.”
He adjusted the oil-stove, threw a warmed blanket over her feet, and hurried to his room to build the promised fire. When he came back she smiled.
“You are good to me! It’s stupid of me—my head is so queer—did you say you were—”
“The station-agent. My name is Banneker. I’m responsible to the company for your safety and comfort. You’re not to worry about it, nor think about it, nor ask any questions.”
“No,” she agreed, and rose.
He threw the blanket around her shoulders. At the protective touch she slipped her hand through his arm. So they went out into the night.
Mounting the stairs, she stumbled, and for a moment he felt the firm, warm pressure of her body against him. It shook him strangely.
“I’m sorry,” she murmured. And, a moment later, “Good-night, and thank you.”
Taking the hand which she held out, he returned her good-night. The door closed. He turned away and was halfway down the flight when a sudden thought recalled him. He tapped on the door.
“What is it?” asked the serene music of the voice.
“I don’t want to bother you, but there’s just one thing I forgot. Please give me your name.”
“What for?” returned the voice doubtfully.
“I must report it to the company.”
“Must you?” The voice seemed to be vaguely troubled. “To-night?”
“Don’t give a thought to it,” he said. “To-morrow will do just as well. I’m sorry to have troubled you.”
“Good-night,” she said again.
“Can’t remember her own name!” thought Banneker, moved and pitiful.
Darkness and quiet were grateful to him as he entered the office. By sense of direction he found his chair, and sank into it. Overhead he could hear the soft sound of her feet moving about the room, his room. Quiet succeeded. Banneker, leagues removed from sleep, or the hope of it, despite his bodily weariness, followed the spirit of wonder through starlit and sunlit realms of dream.
The telegraph-receiver clicked. Not his call. But it brought him back to actualities. He lighted his lamp and brought down the letter-file from which had been extracted the description of the wreck for Gardner of the Angelica City Herald.
Drawing out the special paper, he looked at the heading and smiled. “Letters to Nobody.” He took a fresh sheet and began to write. Through the night he wrote and dreamed and dozed and wrote again. When a sound of song, faint and sweet and imminent, roused him to lift his sleep-bowed head from the desk upon which it had sunk, the gray, soiled light of a stormy morning was in his eyes. The last words he had written were:
“The breast of the world rises and falls with your breathing.”
Banneker was twenty-four years old, and had the untainted soul of a boy of sixteen.
CHAPTER V
Overhead she was singing. The voice was clear and sweet and happy. He did not know the melody; some minor refrain of broken rhythm which seemed always to die away short of fulfillment. A haunting thing of mystery and glamour, such mystery and glamour as had irradiated his long and wonderful night. He heard the door open and then her light footsteps on the stair outside. Hot-eyed and disheveled, he rose, staggering a little at first as he hurried to greet her.
She stood poised on the lower step.
“Good-morning,” he said.
She made no return to his accost other than a slow smile. “I thought you were a dream,” she murmured.
“No. I’m real enough. Are you better? Your head?”
She put a hand to the bandage. “It’s sore. Otherwise I’m quite fit. I’ve slept like the dead.”
“I’m glad to hear it,” he replied mechanically. He was drinking her in, all the grace and loveliness and wonder of her, himself quite unconscious of the intensity of his gaze.
She accepted the mute tribute untroubled; but there was a suggestion of puzzlement in the frown which began to pucker her forehead.
“You’re really the station-agent?” she asked with a slight emphasis upon the adverb.
“Yes. Why not?”
“Nothing. No reason. Won’t you tell me what happened?”
“Come inside.” He held open the door against the wind.
“No. It’s musty.” She wrinkled a dainty nose. “Can’t we talk here? I love the feel of the air and the wet. And the world! I’m glad I wasn’t killed.”
“So am I,” he said soberly.
“When my brain wouldn’t work quite right yesterday, I thought that some one had hit me. That isn’t so, is it?”
“No. Your train was wrecked. You were injured. In the confusion you must have run away.”
“Yes. I remember being frightened. Terribly frightened. I’d never been that way before. Outside of that one idea of fear, everything was mixed up. I ran until I couldn’t run any more and dropped down.”
“And then?”
“I got up and ran again. Have you ever been afraid?”
“Plenty of times.”
“I hadn’t realized before that there was anything in the world to be afraid of. But the thought of that blow, coming so suddenly from nowhere,