Aaron's Rod eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 452 pages of information about Aaron's Rod.

Aaron's Rod eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 452 pages of information about Aaron's Rod.

“Don’t bother now.  Get warm and still—­”

“I felt it—­I felt it go, inside me, the minute I gave in to her.  It’s perhaps killed me.”

“No, not it.  Never mind, be still.  Be still, and you’ll be all right in the morning.”

“It’s my own fault, for giving in to her.  If I’d kept myself back, my liver wouldn’t have broken inside me, and I shouldn’t have been sick.  And I knew—­”

“Never mind now.  Have you drunk your tea?  Lie down.  Lie down, and go to sleep.”

Lilly pushed Aaron down in the bed, and covered him over.  Then he thrust his hands under the bedclothes and felt his feet—­still cold.  He arranged the water bottle.  Then he put another cover on the bed.

Aaron lay still, rather grey and peaked-looking, in a stillness that was not healthy.  For some time Lilly went about stealthily, glancing at his patient from time to time.  Then he sat down to read.

He was roused after a time by a moaning of troubled breathing and a fretful stirring in the bed.  He went across.  Aaron’s eyes were open, and dark looking.

“Have a little hot milk,” said Lilly.

Aaron shook his head faintly, not noticing.

“A little Bovril?”

The same faint shake.

Then Lilly wrote a note for the doctor, went into the office on the same landing, and got a clerk, who would be leaving in a few minutes, to call with the note.  When he came back he found Aaron still watching.

“Are you here by yourself?” asked the sick man.

“Yes.  My wife’s gone to Norway.”

“For good?”

“No,” laughed Lilly.  “For a couple of months or so.  She’ll come back here:  unless she joins me in Switzerland or somewhere.”

Aaron was still for a while.

“You’ve not gone with her,” he said at length.

“To see her people?  No, I don’t think they want me very badly—­and I didn’t want very badly to go.  Why should I?  It’s better for married people to be separated sometimes.”

“Ay!” said Aaron, watching the other man with fever-darkened eyes.

“I hate married people who are two in one—­stuck together like two jujube lozenges,” said Lilly.

“Me an’ all.  I hate ’em myself,” said Aaron.

“Everybody ought to stand by themselves, in the first place—­men and women as well.  They can come together, in the second place, if they like.  But nothing is any good unless each one stands alone, intrinsically.”

“I’m with you there,” said Aaron.  “If I’d kep’ myself to myself I shouldn’t be bad now—­though I’m not very bad.  I s’ll be all right in the morning.  But I did myself in when I went with another woman.  I felt myself go—­as if the bile broke inside me, and I was sick.”

“Josephine seduced you?” laughed Lilly.

“Ay, right enough,” replied Aaron grimly.  “She won’t be coming here, will she?”

“Not unless I ask her.”

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Project Gutenberg
Aaron's Rod from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.