[Villette by Charlotte Bronte]@TWC D-Link book
Villette

CHAPTER XIII
8/17

How was it that Dr.John, if he had not been accessory to the dropping of that casket into the garden, should have known that it _was_ dropped, and appeared so promptly on the spot to seek it?
So strong was the wish to clear up this point that I began to entertain this daring suggestion: "Why may I not, in case I should ever have the opportunity, ask Dr.John himself to explain this coincidence ?" And so long as Dr.John was absent, I really believed I had courage to test him with such a question.
Little Georgette was now convalescent; and her physician accordingly made his visits very rare: indeed, he would have ceased them altogether, had not Madame insisted on his giving an occasional call till the child should be quite well.
She came into the nursery one evening just after I had listened to Georgette's lisped and broken prayer, and had put her to bed.

Taking the little one's hand, she said, "Cette enfant a toujours un peu de fievre." And presently afterwards, looking at me with a quicker glance than was habitual to her quiet eye, "Le Docteur John l'a-t-il vue dernierement?
Non, n'est-ce pas ?" Of course she knew this better than any other person in the house.
"Well," she continued, "I am going out, pour faire quelques courses en fiacre.

I shall call on Dr.John, and send him to the child.

I will that he sees her this evening; her cheeks are flushed, her pulse is quick; _you_ will receive him--for my part, I shall be from home." Now the child was well enough, only warm with the warmth of July; it was scarcely less needful to send for a priest to administer extreme unction than for a doctor to prescribe a dose; also Madame rarely made "courses," as she called them, in the evening: moreover, this was the first time she had chosen to absent herself on the occasion of a visit from Dr.John.The whole arrangement indicated some plan; this I saw, but without the least anxiety.

"Ha! ha! Madame," laughed Light-heart the Beggar, "your crafty wits are on the wrong tack." She departed, attired very smartly, in a shawl of price, and a certain _chapeau vert tendre_--hazardous, as to its tint, for any complexion less fresh than her own, but, to her, not unbecoming.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books