登陆注册
5434800000015

第15章

"You may give Dr. Mulbridge my card, if you please," said Grace, before she turned to go into this room; and the other took it, and left her to find a chair for herself. It was a country doctor's office, with the usual country doctor's supply of drugs on a shelf, but very much more than the country doctor's usual library: the standard works were there, and there were also the principal periodicals and the latest treatises of note in the medical world. In a long, upright case, like that of an old hall-clock, was the anatomy of one who had long done with time; a laryngoscope and some other professional apparatus of constant utility lay upon the leaf of the doctor's desk. There was nothing in the room which did not suggest his profession, except the sword and the spurs which hung upon the wall opposite where Grace sat beside one of the front windows. She spent her time in study of the room and its appointments, and in now and then glancing out at Mr. Libby, who sat statuesquely patient in the buggy. His profile cut against the sky was blameless; and a humorous shrewdness which showed in the wrinkle at his eye and in the droop of his yellow mustache gave its regularity life and charm. It occurred to her that if Dr. Mulbridge caught sight of Mr. Libby before he saw her, or before she could explain that she had got one of the gentlemen at the hotel--she resolved upon this prevarication--to drive her to Corbitant in default of another conveyance, he would have his impressions and conjectures, which doubtless the bunch of lilies in her hand would do their part to stimulate. She submitted to this possibility, and waited for his coming, which began to seem unreasonably delayed. The door opened at last, and a tall, powerfully framed man of thirty-five or forty, dressed in an ill-fitting suit of gray Canada homespun appeared. He moved with a slow, pondering step, and carried his shaggy head bent downwards from shoulders slightly rounded. His dark beard was already grizzled, and she saw that his mustache was burnt and turned tawny at points by smoking, of which habit his presence gave stale evidence to another sense. He held Grace's card in his hand, and he looked at her, as he advanced, out of gray eyes that, if not sympathetic, were perfectly intelligent, and that at once sought to divine and class her. She perceived that he took in the lilies and her coming color; she felt that he noted her figure and her dress.

She half rose in response to his questioning bow, and he motioned her to her seat again. "I had to keep you waiting," he said. "I was up all night with a patient, and I was asleep when my mother called me." He stopped here, and definitively waited for her to begin.

She did not find this easy, as he took a chair in front of her, and sat looking steadily in her face. "I'm sorry to have disturbed you"

"Oh, not at all," he interrupted. "The rule is to disturb a doctor."

"I mean," she began again, "that I am not sure that I am justified in disturbing you."

He waited a little while for her to go on, and then he said, "Well, let us hear."

"I wish to consult with you," she broke out, and again she came to a sudden pause; and as she looked into his vigilant face, in which she was not sure there was not a hovering derision, she could not continue. She felt that she ought to gather courage from the fact that he had not started, or done anything positively disagreeable when she had asked for a consultation; but she could not, and it did not avail her to reflect that she was rendering herself liable to all conceivable misconstruction, --that she was behaving childishly, with every appearance of behaving guiltily.

He came to her aid again, in a blunt fashion, neither kind nor unkind, but simply common sense. "What is the matter?"

"What is the matter?" she repeated.

"Yes. What are the symptoms? Where and how are, you sick?"

"I am not sick," she cried. They stared at each other in reciprocal amazement and mystification.

"Then excuse me if I ask you what you wish me to do?"

"Oh!" said Grace, realizing his natural error, with a flush. "It is n't in regard to myself that I wish to consult with you. It's another person--a friend"--"Well," said Dr. Mulbridge, laughing, with the impatience of a physician used to making short cuts through the elaborate and reluctant statements of ladies seeking advice, "what is the matter with your friend?"

"She has been an invalid for some time," replied Grace. The laugh, which had its edge of patronage and conceit, stung her into self-possession again, and she briefly gave the points of Mrs. Maynard's case, with the recent accident and the symptoms developed during the night. He listened attentively, nodding his head at times, and now and then glancing sharply at her, as one might at a surprisingly intelligent child.

"I must see her," he said decidedly, when she came to an end. "I will see her as soon as possible. I will come over to Jocelyn's this afternoon,--as soon as I can get my dinner, in fact."

There was such a tone of dismissal in his words that she rose, and he promptly followed her example. She stood hesitating a moment. Then, "I don't know whether you understood that I wish merely to consult with you," she said; "that I don't wish to relinquish the case to you"--"Relinquish the case--consult"-- Dr. Mulbridge stared at her. "No, I don't understand. What do you mean by not relinquishing the case?

If there is some one else in attendance"

"I am in attendance," said the girl firmly. "I am Mrs. Maynard's physician."

"You? Physician"

"If you have looked at my card"--she began with indignant severity.

He gave a sort of roar of amusement and apology, and then he stared at her again with much of the interest of a naturalist in an extraordinary specimen.

"I beg your pardon," he exclaimed. "I did n't look at it"; but he now did so, where he held it crumpled in the palm of his left hand. "My mother said it was a young lady, and I did n't look. Will you will you sit down, Dr. Breen?" He bustled in getting her several chairs.

同类推荐
  • 前后七国志

    前后七国志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Phantastes

    Phantastes

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Colonel Chabert

    Colonel Chabert

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 冷庐医话

    冷庐医话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 商虫篇

    商虫篇

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 重生之校花王者保镖

    重生之校花王者保镖

    柳逸重生了,不小心成为大小姐的保镖,而都市中居然还有修炼者……
  • 岛上的奋斗故事

    岛上的奋斗故事

    在这座岛上,我要度过一段漫长的生涯,想活下来就要一步步脚踏实地……
  • 东凌王妃

    东凌王妃

    她是一代皇后,却被活活烧死在宫中,重生在乱世中,面对仇人的逼迫,小人的冷眼,平民和皇族的仇视。重头来过岂能让这一切重演?PS女强重生,爽文,热血天下权谋!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 龟裂土

    龟裂土

    夜色早已浓稠,一支四十来骑的队伍,沿着河流方向,悄然行进在菲留扎谷地。这条凉幽幽的山谷——蜿蜒于波斯与土库曼人肆意驰骋的广阔平原间,四面为科佩特山脉环绕,山峦起伏,依稀连绵,森严地守卫在峡谷两侧。这条千年沧桑的伊朗古道,无尽的岁月中,见证了多少人世间的悲欢离合,在这里,人们的心灵,有过欢腾和喜悦,有过悲伤和流泪,也有过死亡和别离。长夜漫漫,已深入越发漆黑的后半夜,一线绵长的马队旁,有十四个身影,拖着步子蹒跚而行,一根绳索将他们前后相连。内中,有九名年轻女子和一个年纪尚小的女孩。那女孩倒没用绳子拴着,疲惫不堪地落在队伍后面。
  • 全能炼药师

    全能炼药师

    家族拥有神秘功法,却惨遭灭族。 好吧!我们转移阵地…… 身居荒野小山村,却被迫离家。 好吧!我们继续转移…… 为了养活一大家子人,无奈只好加入组织,混口饭吃…… “加入组织,就要服从上级管理!”小正太冷眼说教。 小萝莉听…… “作为一名队员,给队长看家门,那是你的本分!”小正太冷眼说教。 小萝莉继续听…… 于是,漫长的“被”奴役生涯,开始了……
  • 海国战记

    海国战记

    地球历3588年,人类移居的类地行星戴尔曼星遭到了外星生命的猛烈攻击,人们使用了所有核武器摧毁外星战舰,却发现外星人留下了一种人类武器无法杀死的“巨虫”。巨虫吞噬着戴尔曼星的生命,以几何倍数迅速繁殖,不到半年,就占领了将近大部分陆地。人类被迫退居到面积狭小的海岛和人工浮岛,并重新建立了各自的国家。为抢夺匮乏的海上资源,各国经常发生战争……海上的人们深陷于内部的争夺中,似乎完全忘记了他们曾经拥有过的富饶的大陆。直到3821年,十四岁的莱斯利进入西兰军校,他在这里认识了达菲和一群热血,充满勇气的同伴,他们都有同一个目标使命:消灭巨虫,重夺属于人类的陆地。
  • 燃犀传:海上宴

    燃犀传:海上宴

    火翼和冰鳍全家去海盐岐观潮,却迷失歧路,被千家主人追杀。逃亡中,火翼来到传说中的海市,邂逅了强大的远古神兽“犼”,并得知了“射潮祭”的真相。为了战胜蛟龙,保护人类,冰鳍不惜牺牲自己,最终启动了强大的“烛阴魂象”。壮观瑰丽的海之盛宴,其实是一场幻兽之间的殊死搏杀……
  • 世界文化博览3

    世界文化博览3

    带你领略世界文化的博大精深,感受文化的力量和魅力,享受精神的盛宴,浓缩世界文化知识精粹。旨在为读者提高文化修养、丰富人生内涵、添加知识储备、准备写作素材、增加聚会谈资……
  • Penrod and Sam

    Penrod and Sam

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 擒“狼”记(二)

    擒“狼”记(二)

    已经更残夜尽了,又是一个通宵。有些人家的窗里已经透出了灯光。那些上早班的人正在起床;而另外一些人,那些幸运儿,还要舒舒服服地再躺一会儿。可是我还没有躺下睡觉呢。事情多极了,因为我担任着代理处长的职务。昨天一天真是忙得不可开交。回到家里已经是夜里一点了。可是电话铃又响了起来:“是维尼阿明。亚历山大罗维奇吗?中尉瓦休京在打搅您!一个因公出差的叫苏林的人,在曙光旅馆被枪击中,身受重伤。检察院的侦察员戈柳诺夫和医生已在旅馆。