Search      Hot    Newest Novel
HOME > Classical Novels > The Lilac Girl > CHAPTER XIII.
Font Size:【Large】【Middle】【Small】 Add Bookmark  
CHAPTER XIII.
 After supper that night Wade1 called on Doctor Crimmins. The Doctor occupied a small house which had many years before been used as a school. At one side the Doctor had built a little office, with an entrance from a short brick walk leading to the street. The ground-glass door held the inscription2, "Josiah L. Crimmins, M.D. Office." Wade's ring brought the Doctor's housekeeper3, a bent4, near-sighted, mumbling5 old woman, who informed Wade that the Doctor was out on a call, but would be back presently. She led the way into the study, turned up the lamp and left him. The study was office and library and living-room in one, a large, untidy room with books lining6 two sides of it, and a third devoted7 to shelf on shelf of bottles and jars and boxes. Near the bottle end of the apartment the Doctor had his desk and his few appliances. At the other end was a big oak table covered with a debris8 of books, magazines, newspapers, tobacco cans, pipes, and general litter. There was a mingled9 odor, not unpleasant, of drugs and disinfectants, tobacco and leather. Wade made himself comfortable in a big padded armchair, one of those genuinely comfortable chairs which modern furnishers have thrust into oblivion, picked up a magazine at random10, slapped the dust off it and filled his pipe. He was disturbed by the sound of brisk footsteps on the bricks outside. Then a key was inserted in the lock and the Doctor entered from the little lobby, bag in hand.  
"Ha! Who have we here? Welcome, my dear Herrick, welcome! I hope you come as a friend and not as a patient. Quite right, sir. Keep out of the doctor's clutches as long as possible. Well, well, a warm night this." The Doctor wiped his face with his handkerchief, wafting11 a strong odor of ether about the room. Then he took off his black frock-coat, hung it on a hook behind the door, and slipped into a rusty12 old brown velvet13 house-coat. After that he filled his pipe, talking the while, and, when it was lighted, said "Ha" again very loudly and contentedly14, and took down a half-gallon bottle from the medicine shelves. This he placed on the table by the simple expedient15 of sweeping16 a pile of newspapers to the floor.
 
"Now where are those glasses, I wonder?" He looked about the room searchingly over the tops of his spectacles. "There we are." He discovered one on his desk and another on the shelf over the little sink. The latter held some liquid which he first smelled, then tasted and finally threw away. "Wonder what that was," he muttered. "Well, a little rinsing17 will fix it. Here we are now, Mr. Herrick. Pour your drink, sir, and I'll put the water in. Don't be afraid of it. It's as mild as milk."
 
"You're quite sure it isn't laudanum?" asked Wade, with a suspicious look at the big bottle.
 
"Bless you, no." The Doctor lowered himself into a chair with a sigh of relief and contentment. "Now tell me the news, Mr. Herrick. I haven't seen our good friends at The Cedars18 since yesterday."
 
Wade sipped19 from his glass, set it down, hesitated.
 
"The only piece of news I have, Doctor," he said, finally, "is that I asked Miss Walton to marry me this morning."
 
"Bless my soul!" The Doctor started to rise. "I do most heartily20 congratulate you, Mr. Herrick!"
 
"Hold on, though," said Wade. "Don't jump to conclusions. She hasn't accepted me, Doctor."
 
"What! But she's going to?"
 
"I wish I was certain," replied Wade, with a smile.
 
"But—why, I'd have said she was fond of you, Mr. Herrick. Miss Mullett and I were talking it over just the other day. Old busy-bodies, I suppose you'd call us. But what did she say—if that isn't an impertinent question, sir."
 
"Well, it seems that there's some one else."
 
"Never!"
 
"Yes. I don't know why there shouldn't be."
 
"Miss Mullett told me that Miss Eve had never shown the slightest favor to any one since she'd known her."
 
"Maybe this was before that. It isn't very clear just how the other chap stands with her. But she asked time to think it over."
 
............
Join or Log In! You need to log in to continue reading
   
 

Login into Your Account

Email: 
Password: 
  Remember me on this computer.

All The Data From The Network AND User Upload, If Infringement, Please Contact Us To Delete! Contact Us
About Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Tag List | Recent Search  
©2010-2018 wenovel.com, All Rights Reserved