The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1945, Blaðsíða 43

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1945, Blaðsíða 43
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 41 over her, like a vast feather bed. And yet ihe mission stood on a hill overlook- ing the river. Down in the valley it was hotter still. Moreover, the mission was clean. The walls and floors were scrubbed white, the children and the native servants all wore white, which made their skins look darker by contrast. The sun shone through the west win- dows on rows of white beds. Ruth’s eyes ached with all the hard brilliance of the place. She longed for a bit of shade. She watched Caroline moving down the corridor quiet and efficient, the only cool and calm appear- ing thing on that hot, white afternoon. She watched her and envied her; her capacity for work, her patience and her self control. She knew that underneath, her sister-in-law was quite as tense and anxious as she herself, that she shared Ruth’s anxiety though no one coiild have guessed it. It was over a month now since they had seen Bob. He and the rest of the staff from the mission hospital had gone down into the valley when the pestilence had broken out. He had been there ever since and the pestilence still raged through the city in the valley and through all the villages scattered through the jungle. The wailing of the mourners came up to them from below, a cry of human anguish now loud, now hushed, like the pulsing of the heart of humanity. Ruth wanted to cover her ears and run, but there was no place to run to and nothing could shut out the crying. So far the mission on the hill had been untouched by the disease ravaging the rest of the country. To keep it so, the door was locked and no one was allowed to come in from the outside. It was a tiny island of safety in that great sea of agony. Caroline had been left in charge. She had wanted to go with the others but one must stay and look after the people at the mission. Ruth had stayed with her. Bob insisted that she must on account of the baby. When she thought about the baby she knew he was right. Only sometimes she didn’t think about the baby. She thought of Bob, facing a dangerous enemy, the more danger- ous and deadly because no one seemed to know the nature of the thing he was fighting. Each day, the letters for the mission were left in a box at the foot of the hill. So far, there had always been a letter from Bob. And yet each day Ruth had stood, her mouth dry with fear, her heart constricted in an icy band while the mail was being distributed, saying over and over to herself, “Please God let there be a letter from him to- day, please let me know that he is still alive.” So far, her prayer had always been answered. Right now she was holding one of these letters in her hand: “Miaybe we could do something if we only knew more about the thing we’re up against, but whichever way we turn, we are baulked by the ignorance of the natives. If only we could perform a few autop- sies we might learn something, and yet the body of the most despised beggar, or the most degenerate criminal becomes sacred in death. We dare not touch them. At last I have been able to get some material though I have had to use the tactics of a nineteenth century grave robber, and my pathological lab- oratory is as carefully concealed as a gangster’s hideout. You must burn this letter. Not that I don’t trust the people at the mission, but someone else might read it, and the fewer people who know our secret the safer it is.” There was a small charcoal brazier in the diet kitchen where Ruth stood and she thrust the letter into it and watched the paper burst into flames and then curl up, a wisp of grey ash. It was one more risk Bob was taking, one more thing for her to worry about. Now she must go back to work. The nursery was her responsibility. Caroline with the help of the native nurses looked after the women and the older children. The men had all gone to help in the village. She stepped into the younger children’s dormitory. It was

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The Icelandic Canadian

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