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"No," he said heavily, "I'm not. If it's got to be someone, Sidney, I'd rather have it the roomer upstairs than Wilson. There's a lot of talk about Wilson."
"It isn't necessary to malign my friends." He rose.
"I thought perhaps, since you are going away, you would let me keep Reginald. He'd be something to remember you by."
"One would think I was about to die! I set Reginald free that day in the country. I'm sorry, Joe. You'll come to see me now and then, won't you?"
"If I do, do you think you may change your mind?"
"I'm afraid not."
"I've got to fight this out alone, and the less I see of you the better." But his next words belied his intention. "And Wilson had better lookout. I'll be watching. If I see him playing any of his tricks around you--well, he'd better look out!"
That, as it turned out, was Joe's farewell. He had reached the breaking-point. He gave her a long look, blinked, and walked rapidly out to the Street. Some of the dignity of his retreat was lost by the fact that the cat followed him, close at his heels.
Sidney was hurt, greatly troubled. If this was love, she did not want it--this strange compound of suspicion and despair, injured pride and threats. Lovers in fiction were of two cla.s.ses--the accepted ones, who loved and trusted, and the rejected ones, who took themselves away in despair, but at least took themselves away. The thought of a future with Joe always around a corner, watching her, obsessed her. She felt aggrieved, insulted. She even shed a tear or two, very surrept.i.tiously; and then, being human and much upset, and the cat startling her by its sudden return and selfish advances, she shooed it off the veranda and set an imaginary dog after it. Whereupon, feeling somewhat better, she went in and locked the balcony window and proceeded upstairs.
Le Moyne's light was still going. The rest of the household slept. She paused outside the door.
"Are you sleepy?"--very softly.
There was a movement inside, the sound of a book put down. Then: "No, indeed."
"I may not see you in the morning. I leave to-morrow."
"Just a minute."
From the sounds, she judged that he was putting on his shabby gray coat. The next moment he had opened the door and stepped out into the corridor.
"I believe you had forgotten!"
"I? Certainly not. I started downstairs a while ago, but you had a visitor."
"Only Joe Drummond."
He gazed down at her quizzically.
"And--is Joe more reasonable?"
"He will be. He knows now that I--that I shall not marry him."
"Poor chap! He'll buck up, of course. But it's a little hard just now."
"I believe you think I should have married him."
"I am only putting myself in his place and realizing--When do you leave?"
"Just after breakfast."
"I am going very early. Perhaps--"
He hesitated. Then, hurriedly:--
"I got a little present for you--nothing much, but your mother was quite willing. In fact, we bought it together."
He went back into his room, and returned with a small box.
"With all sorts of good luck," he said, and placed it in her hands.
"How dear of you! And may I look now?"
"I wish you would. Because, if you would rather have something else--"
She opened the box with excited fingers. Ticking away on its satin bed was a small gold watch.
"You'll need it, you see," he explained nervously, "It wasn't extravagant under the circ.u.mstances. Your mother's watch, which you had intended to take, had no second-hand. You'll need a second-hand to take pulses, you know."
"A watch," said Sidney, eyes on it. "A dear little watch, to pin on and not put in a pocket. Why, you're the best person!"
"I was afraid you might think it presumptuous," he said. "I haven't any right, of course. I thought of flowers--but they fade and what have you?
You said that, you know, about Joe's roses. And then, your mother said you wouldn't be offended--"
"Don't apologize for making me so happy!" she cried. "It's wonderful, really. And the little hand is for pulses! How many queer things you know!"
After that she must pin it on, and slip in to stand before his mirror and inspect the result. It gave Le Moyne a queer thrill to see her there in the room among his books and his pipes. It make him a little sick, too, in view of to-morrow and the thousand-odd to-morrows when she would not be there.
"I've kept you up shamefully,'" she said at last, "and you get up so early. I shall write you a note from the hospital, delivering a little lecture on extravagance--because how can I now, with this joy s.h.i.+ning on me? And about how to keep Katie in order about your socks, and all sorts of things. And--and now, good-night."
She had moved to the door, and he followed her, stooping a little to pa.s.s under the low chandelier.
"Good-night," said Sidney.
"Good-bye--and G.o.d bless you."
She went out, and he closed the door softly behind her.
CHAPTER IX
Sidney never forgot her early impressions of the hospital, although they were chaotic enough at first. There were uniformed young women coming and going, efficient, cool-eyed, low of voice. There were medicine-closets with orderly rows of labeled bottles, linen-rooms with great stacks of sheets and towels, long vistas of s.h.i.+ning floors and lines of beds. There were brisk internes with duck clothes and bra.s.s b.u.t.tons, who eyed her with friendly, patronizing glances. There were bandages and dressings, and great white screens behind which were played little or big dramas, baths or deaths, as the case might be. And over all brooded the mysterious authority of the superintendent of the training-school, dubbed the Head, for short.
Twelve hours a day, from seven to seven, with the off-duty intermission, Sidney labored at tasks which revolted her soul. She swept and dusted the wards, cleaned closets, folded sheets and towels, rolled bandages--did everything but nurse the sick, which was what she had come to do.
At night she did not go home. She sat on the edge of her narrow white bed and soaked her aching feet in hot water and witch hazel, and practiced taking pulses on her own slender wrist, with K.'s little watch.
Out of all the long, hot days, two periods stood out clearly, to be waited for and cherished. One was when, early in the afternoon, with the ward in spotless order, the shades drawn against the August sun, the tables covered with their red covers, and the only sound the drone of the bandage-machine as Sidney steadily turned it, Dr. Max pa.s.sed the door on his way to the surgical ward beyond, and gave her a cheery greeting. At these times Sidney's heart beat almost in time with the ticking of the little watch.