What a maddening sentence, for I felt she was going to refuse me any spoken explanation.
But one should not listen to what people say, only to what they mean, and she was one of those persons whose minds one must read for oneself, since her words so often deformed her thoughts.
The familiarity and equality of her tone seemed to come from some mood removed from the hospital, where her mistrustful mind was hovering about a trouble personal to herself.
She did not mean "You are not so nice...." but "You don"t like me so much...."
She was so young, it was all so new to her, she wanted so to be "liked"!
But there was this question of her authority....
How was she to live among her fellows?
Can one afford to disdain them? Can one steer happily with indifference?
Must one, to be "liked," bend one"s spirit to theirs? And, most disturbing question of all, is to be "liked" the final standard?
Whether to wear, or not to wear, a mask towards one"s world? For there is so much that is not ripe to show--change and uncertainty....
As she sat there, unfolding to me the fogs of her situation, her fresh pink face clouded, her grand cap and red cape adding burdens of authority to the toil of growth, I could readily have looked into the gla.s.s to see if my hair was grey!
"Then there is nothing you condemn?" said the youngest Sister finally, at the close of a conversation.
I have to-day come up against the bedrock of her integrity; it is terrible. She has eternal youth, eternal fair hair, cold and ignorant judgments. On things relating to the world I can"t further soften her; a man must do the rest.
"A gentleman ... a gentleman...." I am so tired of this cry for a "gentleman."
Why can"t they do very well with what they"ve got!
Here in the wards the Sisters have the stuff the world is made of laid out, bedded, before their eyes; the ups and downs of man from the four corners of the Empire and the hundred corners of social life, helpless and in pyjamas--and they"re not satisfied, but must cry for a "gentleman"!
"I couldn"t make a friend of that man!" the youngest Sister loves to add to her criticism of a patient.
It isn"t my part as a V.A.D. to cry, "Who wants you to?"
"I couldn"t trust that man!" the youngest Sister will say equally often.
This goes deeper....
But whom need one trust? Brother, lover, friend ... no more. Why wish to trust all the world?...
"They are not real men," she says, "not men through and through."
That"s where she goes wrong; they are men through and through--patchy, ordinary, human. She means they are not men after her pattern.
Something will happen in the ward. Once I have touched this bedrock in her I shall be for ever touching it till it gets sore!
One should seek for no response. They are not elastic, these nuns....
In all honesty the hospital is a convent, and the men in it my brothers.
This for months on end....
For all that, now and then some one raises his eyes and looks at me; one day follows another and the glance deepens.
"Charme de l"amour qui pourrait vous peindre!"
Women are left behind when one goes into hospital. Such women as are in a hospital should be cool, gentle; anything else becomes a torment to the "prisoner."
For me, too, it is bad; it brings the world back into my eyes; duties are neglected, discomforts un.o.bserved.
But there are things one doesn"t fight.
"Charme de l"amour...." The ward is changed! The eldest Sister and the youngest Sister are my enemies; the patients are my enemies--even Mr.
Wicks, who lies on his back with his large head turned fixedly my way to see how often I stop at the bed whose number is 11.
Last night he dared to say, "It"s not like you, nurse, staying so much with that rowdy crew...." The gallants ... I know! But one among them has grown quieter, and his bed is No. 11.
Even Mr. Wicks is my enemy.
He watches and guards. Who knows what he might say to the eldest Sister?
He has nothing to do all day but watch and guard.
In the bunk at tea I sit among thoughts of my own. The Sisters are my enemies....
I am alive, delirious, but not happy.
I am at any one"s mercy; I have lost thirty friends in a day. The thirty-first is in bed No. 11.
This is bad: hospital cannot shelter this life we lead, No. 11 and I. He is a prisoner, and I have my honour, my responsibility towards him; he has come into this room to be cured, not tormented.
Even my hand must not meet his--no, not even in a careless touch, not even in its "duty"; or, if it does, what risk!
I am conspired against: it is not I who make his bed, hand him what he wishes; some accident defeats me every time.
Now that I come to think of it, it seems strange that the Sisters should be my enemies. Don"t we deserve sympathy and pity, No. 11 and I? From women, too....
Isn"t there a charm hanging about us? Aren"t we leading magic days? Do they feel it and dislike it? Why?
I feel that the little love we have created is a hare whose natural fate is to be run by every hound. But I don"t see the reason.
We can"t speak, No. 11 and I, only a whispered word or two that seems to shout itself into every ear. We don"t know each other.
Last night it was stronger than I. I let him stand near me and talk. I saw the youngest Sister at the far end of the ward by the door, but I didn"t move; she was watching. The moment I took my eyes from her I forgot her.... That is how one feels when one is desperate; that is how trouble comes.