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The violent grinding of brakes suddenly applied, and the
harsh creaking of skidding wheels gradually died away as the
big car came to a stop. Eddie quickly picked himself up from
the dusty pavement where he had been thrown, and looked around
wildly.
Agnes! Where was his little sister he had been holding by the
hand when they had started to cross the street? The next moment
he saw her under the big car that had run them down, her eyes
closed, a dark stain slowly spreading on her white face.
With one bound the boy was under the car, trying to lift the
child.
"You'd better not try, son," said a man gently. "Someone
has gone to telephone for an ambulance."
"She's not...dead, is she, Mister?" Eddie begged in
a husky voice.
The man stooped and felt the limp little pulse. "No, my
boy," he said slowly.
A policeman came up, dispersed the collecting crowd, and carried
the unconscious girl into a nearby drug-store. Eddie's folded
coat made a pillow for her head until the ambulance arrived.
He was permitted to ride in the conveyance with her to the hospital.
Something about the sturdy, shabbily dressed boy, who could not
be more than ten years old, and his devotion to his little sister,
strangely touched the hearts of the hardened hospital apprentices.
"We must operate at once," said the surgeon after a
brief preliminary examination. "She has been injured internally,
and has lost a great deal of blood." He turned to Eddie
who, inarticulate with grief, stood dumbly by. "Where do
you live?"
Eddie told him that their father was dead, and that his mother
did day work--he did not know where.
"We can't wait to find her," said the surgeon, "Because
by that time it might be too late."
Eddie waited in the sitting-room while the surgeons worked over
Agnes. After what seemed an eternity a nurse sought him out.
"Eddie," she said kindly, "Your sister is very
bad, and the doctor wants to make a transfusion. Do you know
what that is?" Eddie shook his head. "She has lost
so much blood she cannot live unless someone gives her his. Will
you do it for her?"
Eddie's wan face grew paler, and he gripped the knobs of the
chair so hard that his knuckles became white. For a moment he
hesitated; then gulping back his tears, he nodded his head and
stood up.
"That's a good lad," said the nurse.
She patted his head, and led the way to the elevator which whisked
them to the operating room-- a very clean but evil-smelling room,
with pale green walls and innumerable shiny instruments in glass
cases. No one spoke to Eddie except the nurse who directed him
in a low voice how to prepare for the ordeal. The boy bit his
quivering lip and silently obeyed.
"Are you ready?" asked a man swathed in white from
head to foot, turning from the table over which he had been bending.
For the first time Eddie noticed who it was lying there so still.
Little Agnes! And he was going to make her well.
He stepped forward quickly.
Two hours later the surgeon looked up with a smile into the faces
of the young interns and nurses who were engrossed in watching
the great man's work.
"Fine," he said, "I think she'll pull through."
After the transfusion Eddie had been told to lie quietly on a
cot in the corner of the room. In the excitement of the delicate
operation he had been entirely forgotten.
"It was wonderful, Doctor!" exclaimed one of the young
interns. "A miracle!" Nothing, he felt in his enthusiastic
recognition of the marvels of surgery, could be greater than
the miracles of science.
"I am well satisfied," said the surgeon with conscious
pride.
There was a tug at the sleeve, but he did not notice. In a little
while there was another tug--this time more peremptory--and the
great surgeon glanced down to see a ragged, pale faced boy looking
steadily up into his face.
"Say, Doctor," said a husky voice, "When do I
die?"
The interns laughed and the great surgeon smiled. "Why,
what do you mean, my boy?" he asked kindly.
"I thought...when they took a guy's blood...he died,"
muttered Eddie.
The smiles faded from the lips of doctors and nurses, and the
young intern who had thought there was nothing greater than the
miracle of science, caught his breath suddenly.
GREATER LOVE HATH NO MAN THAN THIS, THAT HE LAY DOWN HIS
LIFE!
This ragged lad had climbed to the very height of nobility
and sacrifice, and showed them a glimpse of the greatest miracle
of all--a selfless LOVE! But Eddie must never know this. The
lesson was too poignantly beautiful to be wasted. The great surgeon
motioned the others for silence. "I think after all you
will get well, Eddie," he said gruffly. "You and little
Agnes." |