The Doctor's Dilemma eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 583 pages of information about The Doctor's Dilemma.

The Doctor's Dilemma eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 583 pages of information about The Doctor's Dilemma.

Tardif walked on before me to a low, thatched cottage, standing at the back of a small farm-yard.  There was no other dwelling in sight, and even the sea was not visible from it.  It was sheltered by the steep slope of a hill rising behind it, and looked upon another slope covered with gorse-bushes; a very deep and narrow ravine ran down from it to the hand-breadth of shingle which I had seen from the boat.  A more solitary place I could not have imagined; no sign of human life, or its neighborhood, betrayed itself; overhead was a vast dome of sky, with a few white-winged sea-gulls flitting across it, and uttering their low, wailing cry.  The roof of sky and the two round outlines of the little hills, and the deep, dark ravine, the end of which was unseen, formed the whole of the view before me.

I felt chilled a little as I followed Tardif down into the dell.  He glanced back, with grave, searching eyes, scanning my face carefully.  I tried to smile, with a very faint, wan smile, I suppose, for the lightness had fled from my spirits, and my heart was heavy enough, God knows.

“Will it not do, mam’zelle?” he asked, anxiously, and with his slow, solemn utterance; “it is not a place that will do for a young lady like you, is it?  I should have counselled you to go on to Jersey, where there is more life and gayety; it is my home, but for you it will be nothing but a dull prison.”

“No, no!” I answered, as the recollection of the prison I had fled from flashed across me; “it is a very pretty place and very safe; by-and-by I shall like it as much as you do, Tardif.”

The house was a low, picturesque building, with thick walls of stone and a thatched roof, which had two little dormer-windows in it; but at the most sheltered end, farthest from the ravine that led down to the sea, there had been built a small, square room of brick-work.  As we entered the fold-yard, Tardif pointed this room out to me as mine.

“I built it,” he said, softly, “for my poor little wife; I brought the bricks over from Guernsey in my own boat, and laid nearly every one of them with my own hands; she died in it, mam’zelle.  Please God, you will be both happy and safe there!”

We stepped directly from the stone causeway of the yard into the farm-house kitchen—­the only sitting-room in the house except my own.  It was exquisitely clean, with that spotless and scrupulous cleanliness which appears impossible in houses where there are carpets and curtains, and papered walls.  An old woman, very little and bent, and dressed in an odd and ugly costume, met us at the door, dropping a courtesy to me, and looking at me with dim, watery eyes.  I was about to speak to her, when Tardif bent down his head, and put his mouth to her ear, shouting to her with a loud voice, but in their peculiar jargon, of which I could not make out a single word.

“My poor mother is deaf,” he said to me, “very deaf; neither can she speak English.  Most of the young people in Sark can talk in English a little, but she is old and too deaf to learn.  She has only once been off the island.”

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The Doctor's Dilemma from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.