Old Mr. Wiley | Page 3

Fanny Greye la Spina
heart-felt relief when the heavy eyelids drooped and the boy
slipped off into a natural sleep, nothing like the heavy coma from
which she had struggled so hard to bring him back earlier that night.
She looked up thankfully to meet the understanding gaze of the old
gentleman who with that gesture of admonishment bent over and
picked up the dog, tucked it under his blue-sleeved arm and went across
the room to the door. He did not speak but Miss Beaver received the
vivid impression that his visit would be repeated the following night; it
was as if her sensitive intuitions could receive and register a wordless
message from that other sympathetic soul.

The following morning found the lad refreshed and improved. His first
waking thought was for the dog and in reply to his cautiously
whispered inquiry Miss Beaver whispered back that his grandfather
(the strong family resemblance made her sure it had been the boy's wise
grandfather who had found a means of rousing the child from an
all-but-fatal lethargy) had taken it with him but would bring it again
that night. Miss Beaver wondered at herself for promising this but felt
somehow sure that old Mr. Wiley would bring the pup without fail. She
believed that she had read indomitable determination in those piercing
black eyes; she knew inwardly that he would not rest until he had found
that thing which would give young Frank renewed interest in living.
Although the child appeared, if anything, a trifle less apathetic the
following day and Miss Beaver felt that each succeeding visit of old Mr.
Wiley with the fox-terrier would give the lad another push toward
convalescence, yet the nurse did not feel inclined to mention openly
that secret visit in the dead of night. The old gentleman's finger tapping
his gravely smiling lips was one thing that restrained her; the other was
the irritation betrayed, ingenuously enough, by the boy's mother during
her early morning visit to the sickroom.
* * * * *
Young Mrs. Wiley looked especially pretty in a pleated jade sports skirt,
a white pullover sweater, a jade beret on her fair hair. Under one arm
she carried a small white Pomeranian about whose neck flared a
matching wide jade satin bow.
"Well, how is Francis this morning?" she inquired briskly with the
determined manner of one dutifully performing an unpleasant task. "He
looks better, doesn't he?"
Miss Beaver, to whom this inquiry was addressed, nodded shortly.
The boy did not look at his pretty young mother after his first
indifferent glance as she entered the room. He lay in silence with closed
eyes and compressed lips, a most unchildlike expression on his thin
boyish face.

"Look, Francis! See how sweet Kiki looks with this big green bow!"
Mrs. Wiley dropped the Pomeranian on the bed. The dog snarled and
snapped viciously. Frank thrust out one hand and gave the animal a
pettish push. Bestowing a hard, cold glare on her son, Mrs. Wiley
snatched up the growling dog in high indignation.
"There! I ask you, nurse, if that child isn't just unnatural. I thought boys
liked dogs. Francis is queer. I believe he actually hates Kiki." She lifted
the dog against her face, permitting it to loll its pink tongue against her
carefully rouged cheek. "Pwecious ... Was it muvver's own pwecious
ikkle Kiki? Francis," she addressed her son sharply, "you'll have to get
over your nasty ugliness to poor little Kiki. It's a shame, the way you
hate dogs!"
"But I don't hate dogs!" cried the boy vehemently, his voice breaking
with indignant resentment. "It's just Kiki. I'd love to have a little dog of
my very own, Mother. If you'd only let me have a little dog of my very
own!" The faint voice died away in a sick wail. The boy's eyelids
closed tightly against gushing tears.
Mrs. Wiley gave a short exclamation of impatience.
"Francis has the idea that a dirty mongrel would be nicer than a
beautiful pedigreed dog like Kiki," she cried disgustedly.
"But why not try letting him have a dog of his own?" asked Miss
Beaver ill-advisedly, her interest getting the better of her. "Perhaps it
would give him interest enough ..."
"Nonsense!" snapped Mrs. Wiley sharply. "I won't have street mutts
wandering around the house to irritate poor little Kiki. Nasty smelly
common mongrels with fleas. Indeed not. I'm surprised at you, nurse,
for making the suggestion."
With that, young Mrs. Wiley removed her vivid presence from the
room, leaving Miss Beaver shrugging her shoulders and raising her
eyebrows. And the little boy crying softly, the sheet pulled over his

dark head.
"What's all this, Frankie?" asked the father's voice.
"She won't let me have a dog of my own," sobbed the boy, coming out
from
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 12
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.