As soon as Elizabeth was able to reassure them the greatest danger had passed, Sarah and Sam agreed to go to bed. There would be plenty for everyone to do in the morning, she said, but now until the fever subsided, she and Hannah needed all the space they could get for changing Rose’s nightgown and the bed sheets.
Hugh returned to his seat by the stove, kept the fire going and made mugs of tea for them all at four o’clock and then again at six. Even John allowed himself to nod in his chair, though he’d not leave Rose’s side until the fever was past and she no longer needed lifting and sponging.
In the early dawn, Sam woke, dressed quietly and slipped out of the house without disturbing anyone. He walked briskly down the hill, arrived at his workplace in Tullyconnaught at the usual time and explained to the foreman why he had to go straight home. He arrived just as Hannah came downstairs to begin making breakfast and Hugh stirred in his armchair by the stove.
‘How is she now?’ he asked, as he hung up his cap.
‘Asleep,’ she said, smiling wearily. ‘Proper asleep, Sam. She looks different. You could sit with her while Da has his breakfast.’
‘What did you say, Hannah?’ Hugh said, yawning hugely. ‘I must have nodded off again. Quite disgraceful of me when you’ve been awake all night,’ he added sharply.
‘I can sleep later, Hugh, now Ma’s improving,’ she replied gently. ‘She’s managed to swallow some elderflower and honey and some water. I know Elizabeth’s pleased.’
‘She’s had no sleep either,’ said Hugh thoughtfully. ‘Have you been out, Sam?’ he asked suddenly, as Sam added his jacket to the row on the hooks by the door.
‘Aye. I went down to work to tell them I wou’den be in. It’s thawed in the night and still thawing. There’s a clear strip the whole way down the hill,’ he went on, looking pleased.
‘Great news, Sam,’ Hugh said, nodding as he pushed himself to his feet. ‘I have a thought to put to John and Elizabeth. I’ll need the brougham if they agree. Would you give me a hand to take Bess down to MacMurrays and get her harnessed up?’
‘I will surely. Say the word. That’s what I’m here for.’
They turned at the sound of feet on the stairs and waited till John had moved stiffly to the very bottom.
‘How is she, John?’ asked Hugh steadily.
‘She’s asleep, but she’s like herself,’ he said, with a great gusty sigh. ‘Aye an’ she knows us well enough but she’s that tired she can’t speak or do anythin’ to help herself. It’s a miracle, Hugh. That’s all it is an’ her that near gone,’ he said, sitting down abruptly in the nearest chair and dropping his face in his hands.
‘This man needs his breakfast,’ said Hugh lightly, clapping John on the shoulder, as Hannah came back from the dairy with a jug of milk and a loaf of baker’s bread.
‘An’ so does your Elizabeth,’ said John, wiping away tears unashamedly and looking up. ‘She’s the only one of us has never closed an eye all night. An’ she’s still up there,’ he said wearily.
‘She is, and you’ll not shift her till she’s good and ready,’ Hugh came back at him, a small smile touching his sombre face. ‘But I may be able to get her some help,’ he added. ‘John, I have a mind to go over to Dromore to a doctor there she’s spoken of. I don’t know him personally, but she speaks well of him. I’ll leave Bess at The Grapes and take the train and bring him back with me as soon as he’s free to come. He may be able to advise us better than your man last night,’ he said dismissively. ‘What do you think?’
‘Ach Hugh dear, sure the two of you’s been the savin’ of us. I’ll say yes to whativer you think. Will I go back up and let Elizabeth come down an’ talk to you.’
‘No, I’ll go, Da,’ said Sam promptly. ‘Have your breakfast. Call me when yer ready to go, Hugh, an’ I’ll come down the hill with ye.’
After the fierce cold of the previous day the quiet March morning seemed almost warm by contrast. By the time Sam had seen Hugh safely on his way into Banbridge, a few pale fingers of sunlight were catching the drifts of melting snow under the hedgerows, great shining drops hung like pale flowers on the saturated, bare branches and the wide puddles by the roadside reflected the first patches of blue in the clearing sky.
Hugh was tired and his body ached from fatigue and a night spent on one chair or another, but he was in the best of spirits as he manoeuvred the brougham out of MacMurray’s yard and let Bess pick her own path along the muddy road into town. He left her with the groom in the stableyard of the inn and splashed his way across The Square and up the slope to the railway station.
It was only seven miles to Dromore, by no means beyond Bess’s capacity, but he was glad he’d not attempted to drive. The open country to the north east had caught more of the snow and where the Dromore road lay sheltered from the south, its entire surface was still covered.
In the town itself there were few vehicles moving and he had some difficulty keeping his feet as he made his way to Doctor Richard Stewart’s house in Dromara Street.
‘Good morning,’ he said, to the dark-gowned woman who opened the door and regarded him dubiously.
‘I should like to see Doctor Stewart,’ he went on, returning her gaze directly. ‘I am quite aware how early it is but I am willing to await his convenience however long that may be,’ he said firmly.
‘Who shall I say is calling?’ she asked, as she waved him into a waiting room full of heavy polished furniture.
‘Hugh Sinton from Banbridge,’ he said, as he moved awkwardly past her and seated himself on the nearest chair.
‘I’ll tell him you’re here,’ she said, her cool, businesslike tone betraying just a hint of curiosity.
Only a few moments later, Richard Stewart himself appeared.
‘Sinton, you are early indeed. I trust you are well yourself,’ he said, looking at him closely, as he got to his feet.
‘I am, Thank God,’ said Hugh warmly, as he shook the outstretched hand. ‘But I have friends in great need. My sister is still there with them. I’d be grateful if you would come back with me and give us your advice.’
‘Certainly, I shall,’ he said, nodding vigorously. ‘But may I ask how you got here? The roads into Dromore from the south were all impassable last night, so my stableman tells me.’
‘I came by train,’ Hugh replied, smiling. ‘But you’re right enough. It’s thawing now, but I doubt if Bess could have managed it. I’ve left the brougham at The Grapes waiting for us, if you’ll be so good as to come back with me. Ballydown is about two miles out, towards Corbet.’
‘What time is the next train? Do you know?’ Stewart asked quickly, ‘I don’t often use the train myself,’ he explained, ‘my patients live in such awkward places I still find it easier to ride. Though maybe one day I’ll acquire one of these motor carriages,’ he said shyly.
‘An hour from now,’ Hugh told him.
‘Why, that would give me time to have a little breakfast,’ he said cheerfully. ‘I hope you’ll join me. If you’ll forgive a professional comment, I think you’ve had a rather taxing and tiring time,’ he said, glancing at Hugh again. ‘Indeed, I think I must insist,’ he went on. ‘In fact, I positively prescribe it,’ he added, beaming at Hugh.
Hugh laughed and decided it would be quite discourteous to resist such a genuine offer. Richard Stewart was still the agreeable man Elizabeth had remembered. He liked his directness and his warmth and he had a shrewd suspicion that those twinkling eyes missed nothing of what passed before them. A man in his forties, obviously unmarried, he was smooth-skinned and just a little plump. His manner had a soothing and reassuring quality. What interested Hugh was that the manner was not assumed. It was simply the man himself.
They breakfasted in a small dining room at the back of the tall, Georgian house, a south-facing room with French windows giving onto a long, narrow garden, still completely enveloped in snow.
‘I should perhaps admit that I will take somewhat longer than you to walk to the station,’ said Hugh circumspectly, as the housekeeper removed their plates. ‘I needed a good ten minutes to get here.’
Stewart consulted his watch.
‘Time for another cup of coffee,’ he declared and refilled their cups.
‘That was a most excellent breakfast,’ said Hugh gratefully. ‘I must thank you for prescribing. Would that all medicine were so pleasant,’ he added smiling. ‘I didn’t know how hungry I was. My own fault entirely. Both my friend and his daughter tried to persuade me to eat at Ballydown.’
‘Good. Good.’ said Stewart, beaming with pleasure. ‘A hot breakfast will stand to you as we make our way to the station.
The journey back to Ballydown was achieved without difficulty, despite the thaw turning the road out of Banbridge into a sea of mud. Bess was never troubled by mud, or by rain, it was only ice made her nervous. They kept up a good pace though Hugh did not press her.
He took the opportunity to tell Stewart all he knew about the circumstances of Rose’s illness, both before the doctor had been sent for on Friday evening and what had happened afterwards.
In response, Stewart asked a lot of questions. Some of them surprised Hugh for they related to the members of the family and the parts each of them had played during the long night. Particularly, he asked about Miss Sinton, until Hugh persuaded him to be less formal, knowing they had once been close friends.
‘I must confess to knowing something of your sister’s nursing capacity,’ he admitted, as they drove along the last stretch of the main road. ‘I was at medical school in Edinburgh with Charles and I still keep in touch with another contemporary of ours, now in Manchester, who corresponds with her. He told me she’d once considered doing medical training. He finds her comments on nursing matters most pertinent.’
‘Yes, I fear I have probably deprived the medical profession of a good doctor,’ said Hugh honestly. ‘I and other members of my family whose needs she met, one after another,’ he added sadly. ‘It is so easy to be wise after the event, is it not?’
Jamie had almost finished his breakfast before the housekeeper appeared from the kitchen and bent over his chair.
‘There’s a message for you, Mr Hamilton,’ she said, in the rounded tones she used for dealing with Mrs Caldwell’s young gentlemen.
‘For me?’ said Jamie, startled.
‘Your brother came last night while you were out,’ she said, underlining the while you were out with a note of disapproval. ‘He said you were to get the first train home in the morning.’
Jamie bridled before he gave any thought to what the message might mean. What was young Sam about, leaving orders for him?
‘Did he say why I was to come home?’ he asked sharply.
‘He may have done. I don’t remember,’ she said with studied vagueness. ‘He came in a cab long after I was in bed. I had to come all the way down to the front door,’ she went on, in an aggrieved tone.
‘There must have been some good reason,’ Jamie replied crossly, his voice revealing his first angry reaction now tempered by anxiety. ‘Is someone ill? Has there been an accident?’ he demanded.
‘Yes, I think there was something amiss. Your mother, I think,’ she said, her eyes glittering with unpleasantness. ‘I think that’s what he said,’ she added, as she swept up the dirty plates and took them to the kitchen.
Jamie got to his feet, ran his eyes round the oval table where the boarders ate their meals. There were empty chairs where one or two of those with longer journeys to work had already left, but most of the others were still munching toast and marmalade.
‘Harry, I have to go home early,’ he said, as he leant over his closest companion from his own drawing office. ‘I think my mother is ill, but old Biddy won’t tell me properly what my brother said. He came while we were out last night and she’s only bothered to tell me now. Damn her,’ he ended furiously. ‘Can you explain to the Boss for me. I’ve missed the first train already.’
Harry nodded, his mouth full of toast. ‘We were pretty late, after all,’ he said, swallowing quickly.
‘She could have left a note in my room.’
‘If she can write, Jamie,’ he said, with a sideways look. ‘Sorry about your mother. I hope you find her better. I’ll tell Harding why you’re absent. He can’t very well call you out if its serious,’ he added, helping himself quickly to more toast before the newly arrived rack passed to the other side of the table and emptied itself completely.
Jamie thought about changing his clothes and decided not to bother, so he set off in his dark suit with his spotless stiff collar as he did every morning of the week, except Sunday, when he could sleep late, so long as he was prepared to do without breakfast. Harding was a stickler for proper dress. The first thing he’d learnt in the drawing office was nothing to do with ships, but everything to do with polished shoes and trousers pressed with a knife-edge crease. It cost a fortune to send his shirts and collars to the laundry, but his new friends warned him it would be false economy not to do so. If he wanted a place at the end of his apprenticeship, he had to fork out, even if it left him with little money for the pleasures of life.
He collected his shaving things and his pyjamas, pushed them into a bag and set off briskly, catching a tram almost immediately. It was some distance from the city terminus to the Great Victoria Street Station but although he walked briskly, he arrived to find a queue at the ticket office and the second Banbridge train pulling out. With an hour to wait before the next one he went in search of the waiting room, picked up an abandoned copy of the Belfast Evening Telegraph and occupied himself reading the advertisements for ocean passages and a discussion of the new Bill that would remove the need for flagmen in attendance on road engines.
Hannah was sweeping the floor when she heard the brougham on the hill.
She put away the brush, smoothed the creases from her skirt and called a warning up the stairs before she opened the door.
‘Miss Hamilton, how do you do,’ said Richard Stewart, smiling at her and casting a casual glance round the bright, empty kitchen. ‘Mother upstairs?’ he enquired gently, as Hugh propelled himself up the path behind him.
‘Yes. My father and younger brother are with her,’ she replied, with a gentle smile as she shook his hand. ‘We persuaded Elizabeth to lie down,’ she went on, addressing Hugh. ‘She sat up all night with Ma,’ she explained, turning back to Richard Stewart.
‘And so did you, young lady,’ Hugh reminded her. ‘Is Sarah still asleep?’
‘No. She’s gone up to Rathdrum to see Mrs Lappin and tell her where you and Elizabeth both disappeared to.’
‘Oh dear, I’m afraid I quite forgot poor Mrs Lappin. How remiss of me,’ said Hugh ruefully.
‘I rather gather you’ve all had a great deal to think about during the night. May I go up?’
Hannah led the way and brought him into the fresh and tidy room where Rose lay propped on her pile of pillows. Her face was pale but the harsh note in her breathing had quite gone, leaving only a roughness, a catching of air on inflamed passages that sometimes made her cough.
Richard Stewart looked at her for a brief moment, then shook hands with John and with Sam, who blushed and slipped away to leave his father alone with the doctor.
‘We nearly lost her, sir. If it hadn’t been for Miss Sinton,’ said John, releasing Rose’s hand and moving himself and his chair into a corner of the room where he’d be properly out of the way.
‘So I’ve heard,’ said Stewart quietly, taking his place by the bed. ‘I doubt if I could have done as much for you last night as she did. But I’ll see what I can do now,’ he said, turning to lay his bag on the dressing-table behind him. His back to the door, he opened it and took out his stethoscope.
He turned when he heard a slight rustle of skirts. Elizabeth stood in the doorway, her clothes creased and crumpled, her hair newly brushed, her face fresh and alert.
‘My dear Miss Sinton,’ he said, bowing to her. ‘I’m not sure you need me at all, but your brother asked me to come and I did so most willingly. I would appreciate your help with my examination.’
He sat down beside the bed, took Rose’s hand in his and touched the pulse lightly. She didn’t stir, her eyes closed, her face quite peaceful. He nodded reassuringly to John, then turned to Elizabeth.
‘I want to examine her chest, but I don’t want to startle her. Can you tell her what I’m going to do. Were she to wake it would be helpful, but I am reluctant to disturb her.’
She nodded and moved to Sam’s empty chair.
‘Rose dear, Doctor Stewart is here. Can you wake up for a little,’ she said, leaning close to her and stroking her cheek.
She opened her eyes and smiled sleepily.
‘Good. Good,’ he said quickly, as he stood rubbing the trumpet end of his stethoscope against his hand to warm it.
‘Now, Mrs Hamilton, can you take a deep breath? Good. Was that painful? Yes, I thought so. Unpleasant, I fear, but not a danger. Could you manage to take some more for me? Very tiresome when you are so tired, but we’ll soon be done.’
Elizabeth observed with interest. He treated Rose as gently as a child, his ease of manner at odds with the powerful concentration she observed in his eyes and on his brow.
‘Does it hurt when I press here? And here? And here?’
Rose responded with the slightest of gestures, sometimes no more than a glance towards him.
‘There now, go back to sleep, Mrs Hamilton,’ he said, stepping back to allow Elizabeth to adjust the bed clothes.
‘If I send that charming girl of yours up to her mother, we could have a word downstairs so as not to disturb her,’ he suggested, looking from John to Elizabeth.
They nodded and exchanged glances as he closed up his bag and waited for Elizabeth to go ahead on to the landing. Once downstairs, he stood comfortably in front of the fire beside Hugh until Hannah had taken John’s place and he’d come down and seated himself.
‘There is still some fluid in the lungs,’ he said easily, without preamble, ‘but it is not a threat to her. I would hope it will clear within the week. I think you are quite right to have someone sit with her, day and night, for a day or two, certainly while she is very weak, but after that, provided there are no setbacks, she can be left to sleep. She will need many days of rest before she can walk again, but she must get up for a few minutes every day, beginning on Tuesday.
‘I congratulate you Miss Sinton. The infection was fierce, it has caused much inflammation and might well have been fatal, but some combination of your skill and treatment and, no doubt, your prayers, have brought her through. For such a slightly built woman, she has shown amazing strength, but then, as I observe, she is fortunate in both her family and her friends.
‘I think I detected both lavender and rosemary when I came into the house. I doubt if I could recommend anything better for ease and refreshment, but I’ll prescribe a tonic which will encourage her to eat as soon as she’s feeling less exhausted. I think aspirin might ease the pain in the chest when it becomes tedious, but I fear it will remain for a long time. I hope none of you will feel discouraged when I say that it may be some months before Mrs Hamilton is able to resume her normal activities. All being well, she will recover completely. A long holiday would be of great benefit to her if it could be arranged.’
He looked from John to Elizabeth, Elizabeth to Hugh, and smiled broadly at them all.
‘Oh dear. How pompous we doctors always sound when we pronounce,’ he said, laughing. ‘We study so long to know so little, I suppose we have to convince ourselves we’re not totally ignorant. All we can do is our best. I would be very happy to come and see Mrs Hamilton again and perhaps discuss with Miss Sinton some breathing exercises to help recover the lungs. But for now I rest my case,’ he said with a small flourish of his hand.
‘I’m most grateful to you, sir, most grateful,’ said John emphatically. ‘We’ll mark what you said and Elizabeth here will keep us right.’
‘I have no doubt of that,’ said Richard Stewart, turning towards her and holding her gaze for a few seconds.
‘Well, I must be on my way,’ he said, with a hint of reluctance. ‘I have no surgery on a Saturday, but I do visit the more urgent cases in the afternoon. I shall look forward to coming again,’ he said, as he moved towards the door. ‘Call on me at any time if you have need,’ he insisted, as he shook hands with Elizabeth and John and turned away to follow Hugh down the damp path to where Bess waited patiently in the sunshine.
They were almost halfway to the station when Richard Stewart finally decided to say what had been on his mind since Hugh had appeared in his waiting room some three hours previously. As one of the biggest mill owners in the district, Sinton of Rathdrum was well-known, but the doctor also knew something of his personal history.
‘Sinton, am I right in thinking that you Quakers put a value upon plain speaking?’ he said easily, as they moved along at an easy trot.
Hugh smiled at him, full of a warmth and gratitude he felt it difficult to express.
‘Quite correct. Am I to hope you’re going to apply for instruction?’
‘No, I think not. I’m far too set in my ways. Though I admit I admire much about your Society of Friends. We must make leisure to speak of such things. I fear I grow tedious for want of conversation.’
‘I had not observed that,’ Hugh replied, his eyes twinkling.
‘Well then,’ said the older man, gathering himself visibly and then relaxing with a smile. ‘I am going to indulge in some of your plain speaking. You may say the Spirit has moved me.’
‘The Spirit moving is not the prerogative of the Society of Friends.’
‘I heard of your accident many years ago. I knew too that your sister had nursed you,’ he began slowly. ‘But I had never laid eyes on you till this morning. There is something I must say to you. I am sure you had the best possible nursing, I can think of no one better than your dear sister, but there have been remarkable advances in the area of orthopaedics in the last ten years, particularly in Manchester, where I practised for some time before coming back to my native county. I keep in touch with some of my colleagues there and some of my fellow students from Edinburgh days. There is one I would highly recommend who could almost certainly improve your mobility and most likely reduce the pain you suffer,’ he said firmly. ‘There now, I have done what I was called on to do and I am almost certain to catch the next train,’ he said as they drove past the Crozier Monument and turned towards the station.
‘Thank you,’ said Hugh, looking at him squarely. ‘I’d never thought of any betterment. I’ve tried to give thanks for the life I was given back, but I will now give some thought to what you’ve said,’ he said soberly.
‘Good,’ said Richard Stewart with a beaming smile, as he climbed down from the brougham. ‘Keep me informed about Mrs Hamilton. When the weather improves, I hope I might tempt you to come and dine with me. I think we would not be lost for conversation.’
‘I should enjoy that very much,’ Hugh replied, as he shook the reins. ‘Good day to you, Stewart. We’ll meet again soon.’
Jamie was unlucky. Had he not paused to refresh his memory about the Sunday Service trains for his return to Belfast next day, he would have come out of the station and seen the brougham manoeuvring away from the setting down point. But Hugh was in good spirits and in no mood to dawdle. A few moments after Richard Stewart walked into the station, he was already spinning merrily out of the town on his way home.
Jamie had no objection whatever to walking. For most of his life walking was the only means of going anywhere and he’d always been a good walker, but today the road was thick with mud and he was wearing his best town boots. He could already imagine what a job he’d have to get them dry even before they could be brushed and polished.
The sun was now high in a clear sky, some real warmth touching him as he strode out, but the fresh greenness of fields and hedgerows newly emerged from their covering of snow did little for his depressed spirits. Whatever he might find wrong at home, he had troubles of his own. Money to begin with. No young man could possibly manage on the pittance paid to apprentices. The weekly sum barely covered his tram fares and laundry bills and although his father paid his board and lodging, he made him no allowance.
He enquired if he was all right for money each time he came home, but his visits were now infrequent. Back in his first year, when he had spent so much time studying, he’d told his father he could manage perfectly well. Now he had friends, he saw the mistake he’d made in not being open about his changed situation. Only last week, he’d made up his mind to tell his mother his troubles this very weekend. Now it looked as if that might not be possible.
He couldn’t really understand it. His mother was never ill. She got her share of coughs and colds in winter, as they all did, but he’d never known her lie in bed. So what could have brought Sam to his door last night? And in a cab. Cabs cost a fortune. But then, Sam was never short of money. He paid for his keep at home, but he had a proper wage out of which to pay it. Often enough on his overnight visits, he’d seen Sam take notes from his pay envelope and put them in the wallet he kept in his best jacket, dropping only the handful of coins into his trouser pocket.
By next year it would be different. His apprenticeship would be over and he would get a manager’s job. He was quite determined that he should and the new friends he’d made recently would almost certainly be a help to him. But another nine months was a long time to go on feeling the pinch.
He tramped on, looked idly into MacMurray’s yard to see if any of them were about and turned up the hill. A few minutes later, he walked through the front door, standing open in the midday sun. The big kitchen was quiet and full of sunlight. At the table, Sarah was making bread.
‘Hullo, Sarah, what are you up to then?’ he said brightly.
She glanced up at him, irritated and preoccupied.
‘Were there no trains from Belfast?’ she asked, as she looked him up and down, registered his town clothes and his dirty boots, which he’d forgotten to wipe outside.
‘I didn’t get Sam’s message till this morning,’ he said, shaking his head at her. ‘Sarah, what’s wrong? Is Ma ill?’
‘Ma nearly died,’ said Sarah coldly.
‘Oh now, surely not,’ he said soothingly, looking round the tidy kitchen as if its order told him his little sister was exaggerating, as usual.
Sarah scowled and gave her full attention to the contents of her baking bowl.
‘Where is everybody then?’
‘Sam is sitting with Ma. Hannah and Elizabeth are lying down,’ she began patiently, rather as if she were speaking to a small child. ‘Da’s gone up to Rathdrum to fetch things Elizabeth needs. She’s staying here till Tuesday,’ she ended, looking him full in the face.
‘So what’s wrong with Ma?’ he asked, wary now, warned by her tone that something serious really had happened.
Sarah seemed to have grown taller since his last visit home. But perhaps it was just the apron or the calm way she was making bread. It wasn’t like her at all. She was usually in such a hurry to get on. Some things she did turned out well, others were just a mess. You could never tell with Sarah. But he could tell she was upset. Oh well, she’d get over it. There was nothing he could do about it.
‘I’ll go up and see Ma,’ he said abruptly.
She glared at his dirty boots, but said nothing. He went up stairs, his steps loud and firm, fragments of drying mud dropped gently on each wooden stair as he went.
Sam had been brushing his mother’s hair, but hearing Jamie arrive below, he put the brush quickly back and took up her hand instead.
‘Hullo, Sam.’
‘Hullo, Jamie.’
In the strained silence that followed, Rose gasped and coughed. Jamie stared at her, his face a pale mask, his mouth falling open as he studied her closed eyes and heaving chest.
‘She does that every so often,’ Sam said, matter-of-factly. ‘Her chest hurts, so she doesn’t breath properly, then she gasps a bit to catch up.’
‘Sarah said she nearly died,’ Jamie said awkwardly, embarrassed now that he hadn’t believed her.
‘Aye,’ said Sam, nodding. ‘The doctor from Banbridge said to send for you. So I went up to Belfast. But you were out.’
‘Well, what do you expect on a Friday night? Do you never go out?’ Jamie came back at him crossly.
‘I tell them where I’m going,’ Sam replied, dropping his voice even further lest he disturb the sleeping figure. ‘Would it be that hard to leave word?’ Sam asked, looking away from his brother’s face.
‘Jamie, how good to see you.’
Jamie turned his head towards the cool, soft voice and saw Elizabeth Sinton standing in the doorway, a small tray in her hands.
‘You mustn’t worry about your mother,’ she said reassuringly, as she noted the strained and anxious look on his face.
‘There’s every reason to hope she’ll recover completely, even if it does take a long time,’ she went on, as she put down her tray on the dressing table.
‘Now, if you don’t mind, Jamie, I think I must try to give your mother a little nourishment before we tell her you’re here. She’s been so looking forward to seeing you.’
Jamie got up and walked to the door. It had never occurred to him that the one person he’d always depended on might not be able to help anyone for quite some time. As for the other matter on his mind, he’d have to keep quiet about that. His father would not be well pleased at the best of times, but with all this anxiety about Ma he couldn’t really expect him to understand. As Harry had said, if you want to be sure of a manager’s job, there are those that can help you and those that can’t. That was why Jamie had joined the Lodge. Last night he’d become a full member of the Orange Order.