The White Linen Nurse eBook

Eleanor Hallowell Abbott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about The White Linen Nurse.

The White Linen Nurse eBook

Eleanor Hallowell Abbott
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 193 pages of information about The White Linen Nurse.

Still panting with excitement, still bristling with resentment, Rae Malgregor stood surveying the intrusion and the intruder.  A dozen impertinent speeches were rioting in her mind.  Twice her mouth opened and shut before she finally achieved the particular opprobrium that completely satisfied her.

“Bah!  You look like a—­Trained Nurse!” she blurted forth at last with hysterical triumph.

“So do you!” said the newcomer amiably.

With a little gasp of dismay Rae Malgregor sprang suddenly forward.  Her eyes were flooded with tears.

“Why, that’s just exactly what’s the matter with me!” she cried.  “My face is all worn out trying to look like a Trained Nurse!  Oh, Zillah, how do you know you were meant to be a Trained Nurse?  How does anybody know?  Oh, Zillah!  Save me!  Save me!”

Languorously Zillah Forsyth looked up from her work, and laughed.  Her laugh was like the accidental tinkle of sleighbells in mid-summer, vaguely disquieting, a shiver of frost across the face of a lily.

“Save you from what, you great big overgrown, tow-headed doll-baby?” she questioned blandly.  “For Heaven’s sake, the only thing you need is to go back to whatever toy-shop you came from and get a new head.  What in Creation’s the matter with you lately, anyway?  Oh, of course, you’ve had rotten luck this past month, but what of it?  That’s the trouble with you country girls.  You haven’t got any stamina.”

With slow, shuffling-footed astonishment Rae Malgregor stepped out into the center of the room.  “Country girls,” she repeated blankly.  “Why, you’re a country girl yourself!”

“I am not!” snapped Zillah Forsyth.  “I’ll have you understand that there are nine thousand people in the town I come from—­and not a rube among them.  Why I tended soda fountain in the swellest drug-store there a whole year before I even thought of taking up nursing.  And I wasn’t as green—­when I was six months old—­as you are now!”

Slowly with a soft-snuggling sigh of contentment she raised her slim white fingers to coax her dusky hair a little looser, a little farther down, a little more madonna-like across her sweet, mild forehead, then snatching out abruptly at a convenient shirt-waist began with extraordinary skill to apply its dangly lace sleeves as a protective bandage for the delicate glass-faced motto still in her lap, placed the completed parcel with inordinate scientific precision in the exact corner of her packing-box, and then went on very diligently, very zealously, to strip the men’s photographs from the mirror on her bureau.  There were twenty-seven photographs in all, and for each one she had already cut and prepared a small square of perfectly fresh, perfectly immaculate white tissue wrapping-paper.  No one so transcendently fastidious, so exquisitely neat, in all her personal habits had ever trained in that particular hospital before.

Very soberly the doll-faced girl stood watching the men’s pleasant paper countenances smooth away one by one into their chaste white veilings, until at last quite without warning she poked an accusing, inquisitive finger directly across Zillah Forsyth’s shoulder.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The White Linen Nurse from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.