Calvary Alley by Alice Caldwell Hegan Rice
page 243 of 366 (66%)
page 243 of 366 (66%)
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"No!" she whispered. "I can't. You mustn't ask me. I promise you I won't do it again. I don't want to go away leaving you thinking bad of me." His clenched hands suddenly began to tremble so violently that he had to clasp them tight to keep her from noticing. "I better get used to--to not thinking 'bout you at all," he said, looking at her with the stern eyes of a young ascetic. For a time they knelt there side by side, and neither spoke. For over a year Dan had been like one standing still on the banks of a muddy stream, his eyes blinded to all but the shining goal opposite, while Nance was like one who plunges headlong into the current, often losing sight of the goal altogether, but now and again catching glimpses of it that sent her stumbling, fighting, falling forward. At the sound of voices below they both scrambled to their feet. Dr. Adair and the man from the yards came hurriedly up the steps together, the former drawing off his gloves as he came. He was a compact, elderly man whose keen observant eyes swept the room and its occupants at a glance. He listened to Nance's broken recital of what had happened, cut her short when he had obtained the main facts, and proceeded to examine the patient. "The worst injury is evidently to the right arm and shoulder; you'll have to help me get his shirt off. No--not that way!" Dan's hands, so eager to serve, so awkward in the service, fumbled over their task, eliciting a groan from the unconscious man. |
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