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<h2> Chapter 19—Brother Bones </h2>
<p>Rose accepted her uncle's offer, as Aunt Myra discovered two or three days
later. Coming in for an early call, and hearing voices in the study, she
opened the door, gave a cry and shut it quickly, looking a good deal
startled. The Doctor appeared in a moment, and begged to know what the
matter was.</p>
<p>“How can you ask when that long box looks so like a coffin I thought it
was one, and that dreadful thing stared me in the face as I opened the
door,” answered Mrs. Myra, pointing to the skeleton that hung from the
chandelier cheerfully grinning at all beholders.</p>
<p>“This is a medical college where women are freely admitted, so walk in,
madam, and join the class if you'll do me the honour,” said the Doctor,
waving her forward with his politest bow.</p>
<p>“Do, auntie, it's perfectly splendid,” cried Rose's voice, and Rose's
blooming face was seen behind the ribs of the skeleton, smiling and
nodding in the gayest possible manner.</p>
<p>“What are you doing, child?” demanded Aunt Myra, dropping into a chair and
staring about her.</p>
<p>“Oh, I'm learning bones to-day, and I like it so much. There are twelve
ribs, you know, and the two lower ones are called floating ribs, because
they are not fastened to the breastbone. That's why they go in so easily
if you lace tight and squeeze the lungs and heart in the let me see, what
was that big word oh, I know thoracic cavity,” and Rose beamed with pride
as she aired her little bit of knowledge.</p>
<p>“Do you think that is a good sort of thing for her to be poking over? She
is a nervous child, and I'm afraid it will be bad for her,” said Aunt
Myra, watching Rose as she counted vertebrae, and waggled a hip-joint in
its socket with an inquiring expression.</p>
<p>“An excellent study, for she enjoys it, and I mean to teach her how to
manage her nerves so that they won't be a curse to her, as many a woman's
become through ignorance or want of thought. To make a mystery or terror
of these things is a mistake, and I mean Rose shall understand and respect
her body so well that she won't dare to trifle with it as most women do.”</p>
<p>“And she really likes it?”</p>
<p>“Very much, auntie! It's all so wonderful, and so nicely planned, you can
hardly believe what you see. Just think, there are 600,000,000 air cells
in one pair of lungs, and 2,000 pores to a square inch of surface; so you
see what quantities of air we must have, and what care we should take of
our skin so all the little doors will open and shut right. And brains,
auntie, you've no idea how curious they are; I haven't got to them yet,
but I long to, and uncle is going to show me a manikin that you can take
to pieces. Just think how nice it will be to see all the organs in their
places; I only wish they could be made to work as ours do.”</p>
<p>It was funny to see Aunt Myra's face as Rose stood before her talking
rapidly with one hand laid in the friendliest manner on the skeleton's
shoulder. Every word both the Doctor and Rose uttered hit the good lady in
her weakest spot, and as she looked and listened a long array of bottles
and pill-boxes rose up before her, reproaching her with the “ignorance and
want of thought” that made her what she was, a nervous, dyspeptic, unhappy
old woman.</p>
<p>“Well, I don't know but you may be right, Alec, only I wouldn't carry it
too far. Women don't need much of this sort of knowledge, and are not fit
for it. I couldn't bear to touch that ugly thing, and it gives me the
creeps to hear about 'organs,'” said Aunt Myra, with a sigh and her hand
on her side.</p>
<p>“Wouldn't it be a comfort to know that your liver was on the right side,
auntie, and not on the left!” asked Rose with a naughty laugh in her eyes,
for she had lately learnt that Aunt Myra's liver complaint was not in the
proper place.</p>
<p>“It's a dying world, child, and it don't much matter where the pain is,
for sooner or later we all drop off and are seen no more,” was Aunt Myra's
cheerful reply.</p>
<p>“Well, I intend to know what kills me if I can, and meantime, I'm going to
enjoy myself in spite of a dying world. I wish you'd do so too, and come
and study with uncle, it would do you good, I'm sure,” and Rose went back
to counting vertebrae with such a happy face, that Aunt Myra had not the
heart to say a word to dampen her ardour.</p>
<p>“Perhaps it's as well to let her do what she likes the little while she is
with us. But pray be careful of her, Alec, and not allow her to overwork,”
she whispered as she went out.</p>
<p>“That's exactly what I'm trying to do, ma'am, and rather a hard job I find
it,” he added, as he shut the door, for the dear aunts were dreadfully in
his way sometimes.</p>
<p>Half an hour later came another interruption in the shape of Mac, who
announced his arrival by the brief but elegant remark,</p>
<p>“Hullo! what new game is this?”</p>
<p>Rose explained, Mac gave a long whistle of surprise, and then took a
promenade round the skeleton, observing gravely,</p>
<p>“Brother Bones looks very jolly, but I can't say much for his beauty.”</p>
<p>“You mustn't make fun of him, for he's a good old fellow, and you'd be
just as ugly if your flesh was off,” said Rose, defending her new friend
with warmth.</p>
<p>“I dare say, so I'll keep my flesh on, thank you. You are so busy you
can't read to a fellow, I suppose?” asked Mac, whose eyes were better, but
still too weak for books.</p>
<p>“Don't you want to come and join my class? Uncle explains it all to us,
and you can take a look at the plates as they come along. We'll give up
bones today and have eyes instead; that will be more interesting to you,”
added Rose, seeing no ardent thirst for physiological information in his
face.</p>
<p>“Rose, we must not fly about from one thing to another in this way,” began
Dr. Alec, but she whispered quickly, with a nod towards Mac, whose goggles
were turned wistfully in the direction of the forbidden books,</p>
<p>“He's blue to-day, and we must amuse him; give a little lecture on eyes,
and it will do him good. No matter about me, uncle.”</p>
<p>“Very well; the class will please be seated,” and the Doctor gave a
sounding rap on the table.</p>
<p>“Come, sit by me, dear, then we can both see the pictures; and if your
head gets tired you can lie down,” said Rose, generously opening her
little college to a brother, and kindly providing for the weaknesses that
all humanity is subject to.</p>
<p>Side by side they sat and listened to a very simple explanation of the
mechanism of the eye, finding it as wonderful as a fairy tale, for fine
plates illustrated it, and a very willing teacher did his best to make the
lesson pleasant.</p>
<p>“Jove! if I'd known what mischief I was doing to that mighty delicate
machine of mine, you wouldn't have caught me reading by firelight, or
studying with a glare of sunshine on my book,” said Mac, peering solemnly
at a magnified eye-ball; then, pushing it away, he added indignantly, “Why
isn't a fellow taught all about his works, and how to manage 'em, and not
left to go blundering into all sorts of worries? Telling him after he's
down isn't much use, for then he's found it out himself and won't thank
you.”</p>
<p>“Ah, Mac, that's just what I keep lecturing about, and people won't
listen. You lads need that sort of knowledge so much, and fathers and
mothers ought to be able to give it to you. Few of them are able, and so
we all go blundering, as you say. Less Greek and Latin and more knowledge
of the laws of health for my boys, if I had them. Mathematics are all very
well, but morals are better, and I wish, how I wish that I could help
teachers and parents to feel it as they ought.”</p>
<p>“Some do; Aunt Jessie and her boys have capital talks, and I wish we
could; but mother's so busy with her housekeeping, and father with his
business, there never seems to be any time for that sort of thing; even if
there was, it don't seem as if it would be easy to talk to them, because
we've never got into the way of it, you know.”</p>
<p>Poor Mac was right there, and expressed a want that many a boy and girl
feels. Fathers and mothers are too absorbed in business and housekeeping
to study their children, and cherish that sweet and natural confidence
which is a child's surest safeguard, and a parent's subtlest power. So the
young hearts hide trouble or temptation till the harm is done, and mutual
regret comes too late. Happy the boys and girls who tell all things freely
to father or mother, sure of pity, help, and pardon; and thrice happy the
parents who, out of their own experience, and by their own virtues, can
teach and uplift the souls for which they are responsible.</p>
<p>This longing stirred in the hearts of Rose and Mac, and by a natural
impulse both turned to Dr. Alec, for in this queer world of ours, fatherly
and motherly hearts often beat warm and wise in the breasts of bachelor
uncles and maiden aunts; and it is my private opinion that these worthy
creatures are a beautiful provision of nature for the cherishing of other
people's children. They certainly get great comfort out of it, and receive
much innocent affection that otherwise would be lost.</p>
<p>Dr. Alec was one of these, and his big heart had room for every one of the
eight cousins, especially orphaned Rose and afflicted Mac; so, when the
boy uttered that unconscious reproach to his parents, and Rose added with
a sigh, “It must be beautiful to have a mother!” the good Doctor yearned
over them, and, shutting his book with a decided slam, said in that
cordial voice of his,</p>
<p>“Now, look here, children, you just come and tell me all your worries, and
with God's help, I'll settle them for you. That is what I'm here for, I
believe, and it will be a great happiness to me if you can trust me.”</p>
<p>“We can, uncle, and we will!” both answered, with a heartiness that
gratified him much.</p>
<p>“Good! now school is dismissed, and I advise you to go and refresh your
600,000,000 air cells by a brisk run in the garden. Come again whenever
you like, Mac, and we'll teach you all we can about your 'works,' as you
call them, so you can keep them running smoothly.”</p>
<p>“We'll come, sir, much obliged,” and the class in physiology went out to
walk.</p>
<p>Mac did come again, glad to find something he could study in spite of his
weak eyes, and learned much that was of more value than anything his
school had ever taught him.</p>
<p>Of course, the other lads made great fun of the whole thing, and plagued
Dr. Alec's students half out of their lives. But they kept on
persistently, and one day something happened which made the other fellows
behave themselves for ever after.</p>
<p>It was a holiday, and Rose up in her room thought she heard the voices of
her cousins, so she ran down to welcome them, but found no one there.</p>
<p>“Never mind, they will be here soon, and then we'll have a frolic,” she
said to herself, and thinking she had been mistaken she went into the
study to wait. She was lounging over the table looking at a map when an
odd noise caught her ear. A gentle tapping somewhere, and following the
sound it seemed to come from the inside of the long case in which the
skeleton lived when not professionally engaged. This case stood upright in
a niche between two book-cases at the back of the room, a darkish corner,
where Brother Bones, as the boys would call him, was out of the way.</p>
<p>As Rose stood looking in that direction, and wondering if a rat had got
shut in, the door of the case swung slowly open, and with a great start
she saw a bony arm lifted, and a bony finger beckon to her. For a minute
she was frightened, and ran to the study door with a fluttering heart, but
just as she touched the handle a queer, stifled sort of giggle made her
stop short and turn red with anger. She paused an instant to collect
herself, and then went softly toward the bony beckoner. A nearer look
revealed black threads tied to the arm and fingers, the ends of threads
disappearing through holes bored in the back of the case. Peeping into the
dark recess, she also caught sight of the tip of an elbow covered with a
rough gray cloth which she knew very well.</p>
<p>Quick as a flash she understood the joke, her fear vanished, and with a
wicked smile, she whipped out her scissors, cut the threads, and the bony
arm dropped with a rattle. Before she could say, “Come out, Charlie, and
let my skeleton alone,” a sudden irruption of boys, all in a high state of
tickle, proclaimed to the hidden rogue that his joke was a failure.</p>
<p>“I told him not to do it, because it might give you a start,” explained
Archie, emerging from the closet.</p>
<p>“I had a smelling bottle all ready if she fainted away,” added Steve,
popping up from behind the great chair.</p>
<p>“It's too bad of you not to squawk and run; we depended on it, it's such
fun to howl after you,” said Will and Geordie, rolling out from under the
sofa in a promiscuous heap.</p>
<p>“You are getting altogether too strong-minded, Rose; most girls would have
been in a jolly twitter to see this old fellow waggling his finger at
them,” complained Charlie, squeezing out from his tight quarters, dusty
and disgusted.</p>
<p>“I'm used to your pranks now, so I'm always on the watch and prepared. But
I won't have Brother Bones made fun of. I know uncle wouldn't like it, so
please don't,” began Rose just as Dr. Alec came in, and, seeing the state
of the case at a glance, he said quietly,</p>
<p>“Hear how I got that skeleton, and then I'm sure you will treat it with
respect.”</p>
<p>The boys settled down at once on any article of furniture that was nearest
and listened dutifully.</p>
<p>“Years ago, when I was in the hospital, a poor fellow was brought there
with a rare and very painful disease. There was no hope for him, but we
did our best, and he was so grateful that when he died he left us his body
that we might discover the mysteries of his complaint, and so be able to
help others afflicted in the same way. It did do good, and his brave
patience made us remember him long after he was gone. He thought I had
been kind to him, and said to a fellow-student of mine, 'Tell the Doctor I
lave him me bones, for I've nothing else in the wide world, and I'll nos
be wanting 'em at all, at all, when the great pain hat kilt me entirely.'
So that is how they came to be mine, and why I've kept them carefully,
for, though only a poor, ignorant fellow, Mike Nolan did what he could to
help others, and prove his gratitude to those who tried to help him.”</p>
<p>As Dr. Alec paused, Archie closed the door of the case as respectfully as
if the mummy of an Egyptian king was inside; Will and Geordie looked
solemnly at one another, evidently much impressed, and Charlie pensively
remarked from the coal-hod where he sat,</p>
<p>“I've often heard of a skeleton in the house, but I think few people have
one as useful and as interesting as ours.”</p>
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