[Miss Caprice by St. George Rathborne]@TWC D-Link bookMiss Caprice CHAPTER III 2/7
This is no time for hesitation.
Give me the iron!" His words are spoken with authority, and the brawny smith surrenders the rod of glowing iron. Without an instant's hesitation, only compressing his lips firmly together, the Chicagoan presses the red-hot iron upon his arm. Then he tosses the hissing thing aside, and begins to draw his shirt over the raw red scar an inch square, which the merciless brand has seared upon his white arm. Seeing the blanched face of Lady Ruth, and the anxious countenances of the others near-by, the doctor, who has recovered from the shock, smiles in a reassuring way. "I am sorry you saw this; I didn't intend you should.
Let us go to the hotel!" he says, slipping a coin in the hand of the honest smith, who seems loth to accept it. Then the party continue down in the direction of the hotel, where they stop while the steamer undergoes repairs. "Colonel Blunt, will you do me the favor to come to my room? I want to put a small bandage with iodoform on the burn," he says aside, but Lady Ruth hears it. "Colonel Blunt, indeed! What sort of trained nurse do you suppose he would make? I have had experience--you may smile if you like.
Tell the colonel where to find your box of liniments and bandages, and bring it to me." "But, my dear Lady--" "Not a word, doctor.
I shall esteem it an honor; and what I lack in scientific knowledge my aunt can supply." This clinches the matter, and John can offer no further argument against her wish; so Blunt, the Royal Engineer officer, is sent after the doctor's case, which errand he performs willingly enough, for although he knows this affair has brightened up the chances of his rival, still, as an Englishman, he has a deep, inborn admiration for bravery, no matter whether shown in a Zulu warrior, armed with war club and assagai, or in a Yankee youth who throws himself between a dusky child of Malta and a mad dog, to receive the monster's attack. So he hastens up stairs to the room which John Alexander Craig temporarily occupies, opens the door, and speedily returns with the little traveling case in which the young physician keeps many important medicines, an assortment of ready liniment and lint, with the wonderful remedial agents known to modern surgery. To John's surprise, after he has opened the case and started to arrange the small bandage, it is gently taken from his hands. "Allow me," says the pretty "doll," as he has at times been forced to mentally term Lady Ruth, after she has played with his admiration. "But, do you know--" "I never told you my uncle was a surgeon, Sir Archibald Gazzam--" "What! that great man your uncle!" cries the student, with the deep respect a young M.D.has for a famous practitioner. "Yes; and more than once I have assisted him in some simple case at the house.
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