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"Therefore I wish to emphasise the fact that I have not the slightest right to encroach upon your hospitality, or your time, or your services."
"Does that mean that you would rather dispense with the latter? Or are you merely again trying to display a refractory spirit?"
"I'm not doing anything of the kind. I simply don't wish to take advantage of your--your generosity."
"Generosity? My good sir, you are mistaken. Yours is an interesting case. I flatter myself that not everybody could have saved that leg of yours. You know how seldom one gets an interesting case at Market Hinton; I mean to make the best of this one now I've got it. You'll regard this as a hospital. And you'll stay in it, as patiently as your nature permits, until, in due course, you receive your discharge."
There was silence. He watched her while she adjusted fresh bandages. He thought that he had never seen work of the kind more deftly done. As she bent over him he noticed what a dainty profile she had, and what beautiful hands. Presently he spoke again.
"Miss Hughes--"
"Dr Hughes, if you please. I didn't proceed to my M.D. degree for nothing."
"I beg your pardon. Dr Hughes, what has become of my patients while I've been lying here?"
"I've been taking them. Do you object?"
"Object! Indeed, no; only--I'm afraid--"
He stopped.
"Yes? What are you afraid of?"
"Nothing; that is--I hardly know how you'll take it."
"What are you afraid of?"
"Only that, when they've once tried you, they won't care to return to me."
"That's it, is it? I thought so. Do you take me to be that kind of person? I'm extremely obliged."
"You're quite mistaken. I didn't mean it in that way at all, as you know. I meant it for a clumsy compliment."
"It's a kind of clumsy compliment I don't care about, thank you very much."
"But, professionally, you are infinitely cleverer than I am."
"Professionally, I am nothing of the kind. It's not fair of you to laugh at me. Wherever I go people tell me how skilful you are, especially those who know. Besides, you need have no fear of illegitimate compet.i.tion. It is not likely that I shall remain in Market Hinton."
He started.
"You are not going away?"
"I am, most probably. I only came here as an experiment; from my point of view it is an experiment which has failed."
He was still, to speak again after another interval. A more serious note was in his speech.
"Dr Hughes, when that man in the omnibus said I had stolen your purse, did you believe him?"
"I did not."
"Not for an instant?"
"Not for a single instant. And that for the best of reasons; my purse had not been stolen. I could have bitten my tongue off directly I had allowed myself to hint that it might have been; because it instantly occurred to me that it was well within the range of possibility that I had left it behind me at a shop at which I had been making some purchases. I drove straight back to the shop, and there it was."
"Why didn't you allow me to explain?"
"There was nothing for you to explain. As a matter of fact the explanation would have had to come from me, and I was in too bad a temper for that. Women have a reputation for making spectacles of themselves in that particular fas.h.i.+on; it didn't please me to think that I'd fallen in line with my sisters." She added, after a pause: "You've no notion what a vile temper I have."
"I doubt if it's such a very bad one."
"You doubt? You don't! You, of all people, ought to know what kind of temper I've got."
He smiled enigmatically.
"I do."
It was some time afterwards, when he had advanced to the dignity of an easy-chair and a leg-rest, that some of the points of that conversation were touched on again. It was he who began.
"Dr Hughes."
"_Doctor_ Palliser?"
The emphasis which she laid upon the "Doctor" was most p.r.o.nounced.
"Pardon me, I am not a doctor, I am a mere F.R.C.S."
"Is it necessary that you should always 'Doctor' me?"
"Pardon me again. I remember an occasion when you went a little out of your way to make it plain to me that you had not proceeded to your M.D.
degree for nothing."
"You needn't always flaunt that in my face."
"I won't, since you appear to have changed your mind--until you change it again." She looked at him, with a gleam in her eyes which was half laughter, half something else. He went on: "At the same time, since what I have to say to you is strictly professional, I don't think that, on this occasion, the 'Doctor' Hughes will be out of place. You once said to me that you had some vague intention of not remaining in Market Hinton."
"It wasn't a vague intention then; it is less vague now. I am going."
"That is a pity."
"Why? It will be all the better for you; one compet.i.tor less."
"I am afraid I don't see it altogether in that light. You see, I was thinking of taking a partner."
"A partner?"
"Exactly, a partner. The practice was getting a little beyond me. When I am able to move about again, as I soon shall be, thanks to you, it may get beyond me again. Now what would you say to taking a partner?"