Back to Wando Passo David Payne (find a book to read .TXT) đ
- Author: David Payne
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And itâs on this thirteenth day, toward suppertime, that Addie feels a chillâparticularly noticeable in her hands and feetâwhich she at first writes off to overwork. When Tenah comes to summon her to table, the maid finds Addie wrapped in coverlets and blankets, prostrate on the chaise, her teeth chattering uncontrollably. Paloma comes and lays a warm, dry hand on Addieâs brow, checks the inner lining of her lower eyelid.
âEl paludismo,â she tells her son, and Addie sees the gravity of it in Jarryâs face.
Sending everybody from the room, Paloma lifts Addieâs nightclothes and loops a string around her waist. This has been dipped in some astringent liquid that smells like turpentine. In it, Paloma ties a knot.
âWhat is this for?â asks Addie.
âIt will help,â is all she says.
The old woman prescribes a tea of branch elder twigs and dogwood berries. Addie finds this soothing, but despite the remedy, within an hour and a half, her chill has passed into a fever that rages through the night. Every inch of Addieâs flesh feels scalded; she writhes and twists, comfortable in no position. She throws the covers off and calls to have the windows raised, though theyâre already up. Nor can she quench her thirst, however much she drinks. Finally, toward dawn, the fever breaks. She sweats so heavily, Tenah and Paloma have to change the linen twice. As the crews, still sullen-faced with sleep, board flats to cross the Pee Dee to the fields, Addie finally falls into a torpid sleep.
When she awakes, itâs late the following afternoon and Dr. Sims is holding her left wrist and staring at his watch. âI understand you spent an evening wandering the swamps two weeks ago, Mrs. DeLay,â he says in a mock-stern tone that instantly braces her. âI strongly disapprove. Most strongly. Your peregrinations have bought you a case of the remittent fever.â
âDo you meanâŠ?â
âI mean the ague, madam,â he says, snapping shut the lid and slipping his watch into his waistcoat. âI mean, the country fever. That is what the Negroes and the old folks call it, or used to in the days when people still believed that it was caused by miasmal exudations from the swamp. The most advanced opinion nowadaysâhere and on the Continentâholds paludal fever to be caused by the spores of noxious plants, which breed from putrefying matter in the swamps. When the vapors rise at dusk, these deadly influences are carried to us and inhaled into the lungs. Our systems can tolerate a certain amountâa manâs more than a womanâs, a Negroâs more than a whiteâs, a nativeâs more than a visitorâs. You, regrettably, are susceptible on all three counts. The only known palliativeâand, note, I do not say a cureâis sulfate of quinia. Unfortunately, Jarry informs me that Wando Passoâs quinine stores were lost at sea during your outbound trip. I myself, due to the damned blockadeâand please excuse my Frenchâhave been unable, for a month and more, to procure it for my patients or myself at any price. There may still be some stores in Charleston, but, assuming you can find them, they are sure to cost their weight in gold, and are, in fact, more likely to cost their weight in precious stones. Your aunt, however, given her position, might be able to prevail on her connectionsâŠ.â
âIâm sorry,â Addie says, alarmed, âare you suggesting I repair to Charleston?â
âIâm suggesting nothing of the kind, madam. Iâm suggestingâI am strictly ordering you, in factâto remain exactly where you are, in bed. If it comes to that, youâll have to send someone, though I must tell you, the idea of Jarry here, or any Negro, on the roadsâwhich are presently filled with brigandsâwith a large sum of cash, is a recipe for misadventure.â
âIâm prepared to go,â he volunteers.
âIt may not come to that,â says Sims. âThe disease has several manifestations, not all of which are equally concerning.â
âActually, I feel much better now,â she says, gamely sitting up.
âThat, my dear,â says Sims, âis wholly immaterial. The illness follows an invariable patternâfrom chills, to fever, to diaphoresis, sometimes called the hot-wet phase, followed, lastly, by a period of remission before the cycle starts again. The key question is the interval. If you go until this time tomorrow without relapse, then you have the less virulent form of the disease, and we can confidently hope to expel the materia morbi from your system with the means at hand, namely emetics, purgatives, and phlebotomy.â
âAnd if it recurs before that time?â
âWe shall cross that bridge, my dear, when, and if, we arrive at it. The subtertian or malignant form of the remittent fever is far less common in these parts.â
âBut if it isâŠwhat you said.â
Sims holds her stare. âThen Jarry will set out for Charleston on your fastest horse.â
âYouâre suggesting I might die?â
âIn my experience,â Sims says, âthe subtertian or malignant fever, if untreated with quinine, is fatal in four cases out of five.â
Itâs a moment before she fully takes this in. âThank you,â she says, in a clear tone, with dignity.
For the first time in the interview, there is a flash of emotion in the physicianâs eyes. âIâll be back in the morning.â
âYou should rest now,â Jarry tells her, after Sims departs.
âYes, I know I should. But JarryâŠ?â
At the door already, he looks back. âIâll sit with you,â he says, with the ready intuition she remembers from the swamp. âShall I read to you?â
âWould you?â
He reaches for her Byron on the stand.
âNot that, though. Not him. You choose for me. Iâm so weary of my preferences.â
He briefly mulls, then leaves the room. As she waits, the male cardinal alights on a stout limb of the oak outside, and Addie watches as he sings.
ââThere was a roaring in the wind all night,ââ Jarry begins,
ââThe rain came heavily and fell in floods;
But now the sun is rising calm and bright;
The birds are singing in the distant woods.ââ
âThis is familiar,â
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