Under the Redwoods eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about Under the Redwoods.

Under the Redwoods eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 240 pages of information about Under the Redwoods.

“Madame le Blank! ye know!  Got cut about the head down at the fete at South Park!  Tried to dance upon the table, and rolled over on some champagne bottles.  See?  Wants plastering up!”

“Ah brute!  Hog!  Nozzing of ze kine!  Why will you lie?  I dance!  Ze cowards, fools, traitors zere upset ze table and I fall.  I am cut!  Ah, my God, how I am cut!”

She stopped suddenly and lapsed heavily against the counter.  At which Kane hurried around to support her into the surgery with the one fixed idea in his bewildered mind of getting her out of the shop, and, suggestively, into the domain and under the responsibility of his partner.  The hackman, apparently relieved and washing his hands of any further complicity in the matter, nodded and smiled, and saying, “I reckon I’ll wait outside, pardner,” retreated incontinently to his vehicle.  To add to Kane’s half-ludicrous embarrassment the fair patient herself slightly resisted his support, accused the hackman of “abandoning her,” and demanded if Kane knew “zee reason of zees affair,” yet she presently lapsed again into the large reclining-chair which he had wheeled forward, with open mouth, half-shut eyes, and a strange Pierrette mask of face, combined of the pallor of faintness and chalk, and the rouge of paint and blood.  At which Kane’s cautiousness again embarrassed him.  A little brandy from the bottle labeled “Vini Galli” seemed to be indicated, but his inexperience could not determine if her relaxation was from bloodlessness or the reacting depression of alcohol.  In this dilemma he chose a medium course, with aromatic spirits of ammonia, and mixing a diluted quantity in a measuring-glass, poured it between her white lips.  A start, a struggle, a cough—­a volley of imprecatory French, and the knocking of the glass from his hand followed—­but she came to!  He quickly sponged her head of the half-coagulated blood, and removed a few fragments of glass from a long laceration of the scalp.  The shock of the cold water and the appearance of the ensanguined basin frightened her into a momentary passivity.  But when Kane found it necessary to cut her hair in the region of the wound in order to apply the adhesive plaster, she again endeavored to rise and grasp the scissors.

“You’ll bleed to death if you’re not quiet,” said the young man with dogged gravity.

Something in his manner impressed her into silence again.  He cut whole locks away ruthlessly; he was determined to draw the edges of the wound together with the strip of plaster and stop the bleeding—­if he cropped the whole head.  His excessive caution for her physical condition did not extend to her superficial adornment.  Her yellow tresses lay on the floor, her neck and shoulders were saturated with water from the sponge which he continually applied, until the heated strips of plaster had closed the wound almost hermetically.  She whimpered, tears ran down her cheeks; but so long as it was not blood the young man was satisfied.

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Project Gutenberg
Under the Redwoods from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.