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Hilda Wade, a Woman with Tenacity of Purpose by Grant Allen
page 23 of 322 (07%)

"Call me Hilda, please! Hilda!"

The girl's face lighted up again. "Yes, Hilda, dear," she answered, in
an unearthly voice, like one raised from the dead. "I will call you what
you will. Angel of light, you have been so good to me."

She opened her lips with an effort and slowly swallowed another
spoonful. Then she fell back, exhausted. But her pulse improved within
twenty minutes. I mentioned the matter, with enthusiasm, to Sebastian
later. "It is very nice in its way," he answered; "but... it is not
nursing."

I thought to myself that that was just what it WAS; but I did not say
so. Sebastian was a man who thought meanly of women. "A doctor, like a
priest," he used to declare, "should keep himself unmarried. His bride
is medicine." And he disliked to see what he called PHILANDERING going
on in his hospital. It may have been on that account that I avoided
speaking much of Hilda Wade thenceforth before him.

He looked in casually next day to see the patient. "She will die,"
he said, with perfect assurance, as we passed down the ward together.
"Operation has taken too much out of her."

"Still, she has great recuperative powers," Hilda answered. "They
all have in her family, Professor. You may, perhaps, remember Joseph
Huntley, who occupied Number Sixty-seven in the Accident Ward, some nine
months since--compound fracture of the arm--a dark, nervous engineer's
assistant--very hard to restrain--well, HE was her brother; he caught
typhoid fever in the hospital, and you commented at the time on his
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