"We don"t want to oppose or irritate the patient, I"m sure," he said.
He looked towards Doctor Hartley.
"No, no, certainly not!" the young man a.s.sented, hastily.
"Very well, then!" said Mrs. Armine.
Her brows went down and her mouth contracted for an instant. Then she moistened her painted lips with the tip of her tongue and turned towards the door.
"I"ll go first to tell him you are coming," she said.
She went out into the pa.s.sage.
x.x.xIX
Isaacson glanced at Doctor Hartley before he followed her.
"I--doesn"t she look strange? Did you ever see such an alteration?"
almost whispered the young man.
Isaacson did not answer, but stepped into the pa.s.sage.
Mrs. Armine was a little way down it, walking on rather quickly.
Suddenly she looked round. Light shone upon her from above, and showed her tense and worn face, her features oddly sharpened and pointed, wrinkles cl.u.s.tering about the corners of her eyes. She seemed, under the low roof, unnaturally tall in her flowing grey robe, and this evening in her height there seemed to Isaacson to be something forbidding and almost dreadful. She held up one hand, as if warning the two men to pause for a moment. Then she went on, and disappeared through the doorway that faced them beyond the two rows of bedrooms.
"We are to wait, it seems," Isaacson said, stopping in the pa.s.sage. "The patient is up then?"
"He wasn"t when I left," murmured Hartley.
"Did you say whether he was to be kept in bed?"
"Oh, no. I don"t know that there was any reason against his getting up, except his weakness. He has never taken to his bed."
"No?"
Mrs. Armine reappeared, and beckoned to them to come on. They obeyed her, and came into the farther saloon. As soon as Isaacson pa.s.sed through the doorway, he saw Nigel sitting up on the divan, with cushions behind him, near the left-hand doorway which gave on to the balcony. He had a hat on, as if he had just been out there, and a newspaper on his knees. The saloon was not well lit. Only one electric burner covered with a shade was turned on. With the aid of the cushions he was sitting up very straight, as if he had just made a strong effort and succeeded in bracing up his body. Mrs. Armine stood close to him. His eyes were turned towards the two doctors, and as Isaacson came up to him, he said in a colourless voice, which yet held a faintly querulous sound:
"So you"ve come up again, Isaacson!"
"Yes."
"Very good of you. But I don"t know why there should be all this fuss made about me. It"s rather trying, you know. I believe it keeps me back."
Already Isaacson knew just what he had to face, what he had to contend with.
"I hate a fuss made about me," Nigel continued, "simply hate it. You must know that."
Isaacson, who had come up to him, extended his hand in greeting. But Nigel, whether he felt too weak to stretch out his hand, or for some other reason, did not appear to see it, and Isaacson at once dropped his hand, while he said:
"I don"t think there is any reason to make a fuss. But, being so near, I just rowed up to see how you were getting on after your sleep."
"I didn"t sleep at night," Nigel said quickly. "What you gave me did me no good at all."
"I"m sorry for that."
Nigel still sat up against the cushions, but his body now inclined slightly to the left side, where Mrs. Armine was standing, looking down on him with quiet solicitude.
"I had a very bad night--very bad."
"Then I"m afraid--"
"Doctor Hartley rowed down to fetch you here, I understood," Nigel interrupted.
There was suspicion in his voice.
"Yes," said Hartley, speaking for the first time, nervously. "I--I thought to myself, "Two heads are better than one.""
He forced a sort of laugh. Nigel twitched on the divan like a man supremely irritated, then looked from one doctor to the other with eyes that included them both in his irritation.
"Two heads--what for?" he said. "What d"you mean?"
He sighed heavily as he finished the question. Then, without waiting for an answer, he said to his wife:
"If only I could have a little peace!"
There was a frightful weariness in his voice, a sound that made Isaacson think of a cruelly treated child"s voice. Mrs. Armine bent down and touched his hand as it lay on the newspaper which was still across his knees. She smiled at him.
"A little patience!" she murmured.
She raised her eyebrows.
"Yes, it"s all very well, Ruby, but--" He looked again at Isaacson, with a distinct though not forcible hostility. "I know you want to doctor me, Isaacson," he said. "And she asked me to-night to see you. Last night it was different, but to-night I don"t want doctoring. Frankly"--he sighed again heavily--"I only see any one to-night to please her. All I want is quiet. We came here for quiet. But we don"t seem to get it."
He turned again to his wife.
"Even you are getting worn out. I can see that," he said.
Mrs. Armine"s forehead sharply contracted. "Oh, I"m all right, Nigel,"
she said, quickly. She laughed. "I"m not going to let them begin doctoring me," she said.
"She"s nursed me like a slave," Nigel continued, looking at the two men, and speaking as if for a defence. "There has never been such devotion.
And I wish every one could know it." Tears suddenly started into his eyes. "But the best things and the best people in the world are not believed in, are never believed in," he murmured.
"Never mind, Nigel dear," she said, soothingly. "It"s all right."