登陆注册
15753300000014

第14章

Dr. Mulbridge may refuse to consult with me. I know very well that there is a prejudice against women physicians, and I couldn't especially blame him for sharing it. I have thought it all over. If he refuses, I shall know what to do." She had ceased to address Libby, who respected her soliloquy. He drove on rapidly over the soft road, where the wheels made no sound, and the track wandered with apparent aimlessness through the interminable woods of young oak and pine. The low trees were full of the sunshine, and dappled them with shadow as they dashed along; the fresh, green ferns springing from the brown carpet of the pineneedles were as if painted against it. The breath of the pines was heavier for the recent rain; and the woody smell of the oaks was pungent where the balsam failed. They met no one, but the solitude did not make itself felt through her preoccupation. From time to time she dropped a word or two; but for the most she was silent, and he did not attempt to lead. By and by they came to an opener place, where there were many red fieldlilies tilting in the wind.

"Would you like some of those?" he asked, pulling up.

"I should, very much," she answered, glad of the sight of the gay things.

But when he had gathered her a bunch of the flowers she looked down at them in her lap, and said, "It's silly in me to be caring for lilies at such a time, and I should make an unfavorable impression on Dr. Mulbridge if he saw me with them. But I shall risk their effect on him. He may think I have been botanizing."

"Unless you tell him you have n't," the young man suggested.

"I need n't do that."

"I don't think any one else would do it."

She colored a little at the tribute to her candor, and it pleased her, though it had just pleased her as much to forget that she was not like any other young girl who might be simply and irresponsibly happy in flowers gathered for her by a young man. "I won't tell him, either!" she cried, willing to grasp the fleeting emotion again; but it was gone, and only a little residue of sad consciousness remained.

The woods gave way on either side of the road, which began to be a village street, sloping and shelving down toward the curve of a quiet bay. The neat weather-gray dwellings, shingled to the ground and brightened with door-yard flowers and creepers, straggled off into the boat-houses and fishing-huts on the shore, and the village seemed to get afloat at last in the sloops and schooners riding in the harbor, whose smooth plane rose higher to the eye than the town itself. The salt and the sand were everywhere, but though there had been no positive prosperity in Corbitant for a generation, the place had an impregnable neatness, which defied decay; if there had been a dog in the street, there would not have been a stick to throw at him.

One of the better, but not the best, of the village houses, which did not differ from the others in any essential particular, and which stood flush upon the street, bore a door-plate with the name Dr. Rufus Mulbridge, and Libby drew up in front of it without having had to alarm the village with inquiries. Grace forbade his help in dismounting, and ran to the door, where she rang one of those bells which sharply respond at the back of the panel to the turn of a crank in front; she observed, in a difference of paint, that this modern improvement had displaced an oldfashioned knocker. The door was opened by a tall and strikingly handsome old woman, whose black eyes still kept their keen light under her white hair, and whose dress showed none of the incongruity which was offensive in the door-bell: it was in the perfection of an antiquated taste, which, however, came just short of characterizing it with gentlewomanliness.

"Is Dr. Mulbridge at home?" asked Grace.

"Yes," said the other, with a certain hesitation, and holding the door ajar.

"I should like to see him," said Grace, mounting to the threshold.

"Is it important?" asked the elder woman.

"Quite," replied Grace, with an accent at once of surprise and decision.

"You may come in," said the other reluctantly, and she opened a door into a room at the side of the hall.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 倾世绝宠:傲娇公主闹天下

    倾世绝宠:傲娇公主闹天下

    某日,她悄悄地带着她的侍女“私奔”,结果阴差阳错成了泠家的大小姐。又莫名其妙地被某男看上了。某男:“女人,你记住。你生是本王的人,死,亦是本王的鬼。这辈子都被想逃离本王!”某女:“呃……没想到王爷的口味这么重,连鬼都不放!”
  • 神品透视

    神品透视

    楚天因英雄救美偶获无双灵眼,纵横天下独揽美人!唔,接下来该干嘛呢?瞄一眼?擦,老子是那样的人不?再瞄一眼,哟,原来男孩子和女孩子构造果然是不同的啊。继续瞄一眼,咳咳,佛曰,色即是空,阿弥陀佛……这是一个集善良、正义、真爱、柔情为一体的君子如风的故事
  • 上古公敌

    上古公敌

    这是一个娱乐至死的时代,一款名为《上古世纪》的全息网游成为全球第一网游的时代。一无是处的疲懒少年因游戏而崛起,从最基础的格斗入手,以超越常人的妖孽天赋在游戏中混得风生水起,在现实中风光无限。嚣张、算计、抢宝、夺命,他是被无数玩家恨得咬牙切齿却又畏惧如斯的——上古公敌!
  • 快穿:当男主看上男配

    快穿:当男主看上男配

    毅然因为买了一个耳坠,意外的得到了一个叫001的系统!而且还告诉毅然要完成任务才能回家,从此毅然就踏上了性(苦)福(逼)生活。ps:主受……冷漠淡然傲娇受?众小攻
  • 混沌之珠

    混沌之珠

    张凡,大千世界一个平凡无奇的青年。修仙,蜕去凡间之体,度雷劫,成就真仙之身,得永生之大道。且看张凡如何在漫漫修仙途中一步步踏上巅峰。
  • 网游之战将之路

    网游之战将之路

    枪挑百万玩家,斩巨龙,身浴龙血,为了死去的妻子能在游戏中复活,陈默不得不踏上成神之路。
  • 异世有我无敌

    异世有我无敌

    修炼千年终于神功大成,不料想老天爷和他开了个小小的玩笑,让他遇到了亿万年不遇的混沌毁灭雷劫,不过谁让咱有主角光环呢,穿越异世,再搅它个天翻地复。
  • 半山烟雨半城锦

    半山烟雨半城锦

    “你没事吧?你不会躲啊?怎么这么傻啊?”“……”你也挺傻。“喂,你是瞎子啊,怪不得……”“……”你也好不到哪去!“连筑基都不行还敢逞强,以后你在被欺负,我就在旁边看着,看你还逞到什么时候”“……”你要是不突然滚出来……“啊啊啊!诶?这是那儿啊?”“赶紧从我身上滚下来!”
  • 梦醉千古

    梦醉千古

    他一睡梦千古,回到一个英雄还未成英雄的时代。他以为自己穿越千古便是主角,谁知道他只是那个时代的一唯一见证者。
  • 我的儿子是神仙

    我的儿子是神仙

    “老娘素了三年,你丫怎么查出来老娘怀孕的??庸医!”“我要是错了,我就赔钱赔地陪名声,要不要人也赔给你?”