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That night the Vicar scowled over his supper. And before it was ended he broke loose.
"Which of you two sent for Dr. Rowcliffe?"
"I did," said Gwenda.
Mary said nothing.
"And what--do you--mean by doing such a thing without consulting me?"
"I mean," said Gwenda quietly, "that he should see Alice."
"And _I_ meant--most particularly--that he shouldn't see her. If I'd wanted him to see her I'd have gone for him myself."
"When it was a bit too late," said Gwenda.
His blue eyes dilated as he looked at her.
"Do you suppose I don't know what's the matter with her as well as he does?"
As he spoke the stiff, straight moustache that guarded his mouth lifted, showing the sensual redness and fulness of the lips.
And of this expression on her father's face Gwenda understood nothing, divined nothing, knew nothing but that she loathed it.
"You may know what's the matter with her," she said, "but can you cure it?"
"Can he?" said the Vicar.
XVIII
The next day, which was a Tuesday, Alice was up and about again.
Rowcliffe saw her on Wednesday and on Sat.u.r.day, when he declared himself satisfied with her progress and a little surprised.
So surprised was he that he said he would not come again unless he was sent for.
And then in three days Alice slid back.
But they were not to worry about her, she said. There was nothing the matter with her except that she was tired. She was so tired that she lay all Tuesday on the drawing-room sofa and on Wednesday morning she was too tired to get up and dress.
And on Wednesday afternoon Dr. Rowcliffe found a note waiting at the blacksmith's cottage in Garth village, where he had a room with a brown gauze blind in the window and the legend in gilt letters:
SURGERY
Dr. S. Rowcliffe, M.D., F.R.C.S.
Hours of Attendance Wednesday, 2.30-4.30.
The note ran:
"DEAR DR. ROWCLIFFE: Can you come and see me this afternoon? I think I'm rather worse. But I don't want to frighten my people--so perhaps, if you just looked in about teatime, as if you'd called?
"Yours truly,
"ALICE CARTARET."
Essy Gale had left the note that morning.
Rowcliffe looked at it dubiously. He was honest and he had the large views of a man used to a large practice. His patients couldn't complain that he lengthened his bills by paying unnecessary visits. If he wanted to add to his income in that way, he wasn't going to begin with a poor parson's hysterical daughter. But as the Vicar of Garth had called on him and left his card on Monday, there was no reason why he shouldn't look in on Wednesday about teatime. Especially as he knew that the Vicar was in the habit of visiting Upthorne and the outlying portions of his parish on Wednesday afternoons.
All day Alice lay in her little bed like a happy child and waited.
Propped on her pillows, with her slender arms stretched out before her on the counterpane, she waited.
Her sullenness was gone. She had nothing but sweetness for Mary and for Essy. Even to her father she was sweet. She could afford it. Her instinct was now sure. From time to time a smile flickered on her small face like a light almost of triumph.
The Vicar and Miss Cartaret were out when Rowcliffe called at the Vicarage, but Miss Gwendolen was in if he would like to see her.
He waited in the crowded shabby gray and amber drawing-room with the Erard in the corner, and it was there that she came to him.
He said he had only called to ask after her sister, as he had heard in the village that she was not so well.
"I'm afraid she isn't."
"May I see her? I don't mean professionally--just for a talk."
The formula came easily. He had used it hundreds of times in the houses of parsons and of clerks and of little shopkeepers, to whom bills were nightmares.
She took him upstairs.
On the landing she turned to him.
"She doesn't _look_ worse. She looks better."
"All right. She won't deceive me."
She did look better, better than he could have believed. There was a faint opaline dawn of color in her face.
Heaven only knew what he talked about, but he talked; for over a quarter of an hour he kept it up.
And when he rose to go he said, "You're not worse. You're better.
You'll be perfectly well if you'll only get up and go out. Why waste all this glorious air?"