A Diversity of Creatures eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 431 pages of information about A Diversity of Creatures.

A Diversity of Creatures eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 431 pages of information about A Diversity of Creatures.

‘But I couldn’t, could you?’ said Miss Henschil, with a disgust as frank as that on Conroy’s face.  ’It would be horrible—­horrible.  And yet, of course, you’re wonderfully handsome.  How d’you account for it, Nursey?’

Nurse Blaber shook her head.  ’I was hired to cure you of a habit, dear.  When you’re cured I shall go on to the next case—­that senile-decay one at Bourne-mouth I told you about.’

‘And I shall be left alone with George!  But suppose it isn’t cured,’ said Miss Henschil of a sudden.  Suppose it comes back again.  What can I do?  I can’t send for him in this way when I’m a married woman!’ She pointed like an infant.

‘I’d come, of course,’ Conroy answered.  ’But, seriously, that is a consideration.’

They looked at each other, alarmed and anxious, and then toward Nurse Blaber, who closed her book, marked the place, and turned to face them.

‘Have you ever talked to your mother as you have to me?’ she said.

’No.  I might have spoken to dad—­but mother’s different.  What d’you mean?’

‘And you’ve never talked to your mother either, Mr. Conroy?’

’Not till I took Najdolene.  Then I told her it was my heart.  There’s no need to say anything, now that I’m practically over it, is there?’

‘Not if it doesn’t come back, but—­’ She beckoned with a stumpy, triumphant linger that drew their heads close together.  ’You know I always go in and read a chapter to mother at tea, child.’

‘I know you do.  You’re an angel,’ Miss Henschil patted the blue shoulder next her.  ‘Mother’s Church of England now,’ she explained.  ’But she’ll have her Bible with her pikelets at tea every night like the Skinners.’

’It was Naaman and Gehazi last Tuesday that gave me a clue.  I said I’d never seen a case of leprosy, and your mother said she’d seen too many.’

‘Where?  She never told me,’ Miss Henschil began.

’A few months before you were born—­on her trip to Australia—­at Mola or Molo something or other.  It took me three evenings to get it all out.’

‘Ay—­mother’s suspicious of questions,’ said Miss Henschil to Conroy.  ’She’ll lock the door of every room she’s in, if it’s but for five minutes.  She was a Tackberry from Jarrow way, yo’ see.’

’She described your men to the life—­men with faces all eaten away, staring at her over the fence of a lepers’ hospital in this Molo Island.  They begged from her, and she ran, she told me, all down the street, back to the pier.  One touched her and she nearly fainted.  She’s ashamed of that still.’

‘My men?  The sand and the fences?’ Miss Henschil muttered.

’Yes.  You know how tidy she is and how she hates wind.  She remembered that the fences were broken—­she remembered the wind blowing.  Sand—­sun—­salt wind—­fences—­faces—­I got it all out of her, bit by bit.  You don’t know what I know!  And it all happened three or four months before you were born.  There!’ Nurse Blaber slapped her knee with her little hand triumphantly.

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A Diversity of Creatures from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.