[Pollyanna by Eleanor H. Porter]@TWC D-Link bookPollyanna CHAPTER XXIII 7/12
There, by a white-faced Aunt Polly and a weeping Nancy she was undressed tenderly and put to bed, while from the village, hastily summoned by telephone, Dr.Warren was hurrying as fast as another motor car could bring him. "And ye didn't need ter more'n look at her aunt's face," Nancy was sobbing to Old Tom in the garden, after the doctor had arrived and was closeted in the hushed room; "ye didn't need ter more'n look at her aunt's face ter see that 'twa'n't no duty that was eatin' her.
Yer hands don't shake, and yer eyes don't look as if ye was tryin' ter hold back the Angel o' Death himself, when you're jest doin' yer DUTY, Mr.Tom they don't, they don't!" "Is she hurt--bad ?" The old man's voice shook. "There ain't no tellin'," sobbed Nancy.
"She lay back that white an' still she might easy be dead; but Miss Polly said she wa'n't dead--an' Miss Polly had oughter know, if any one would--she kept up such a listenin' an' a feelin' for her heartbeats an' her breath!" "Couldn't ye tell anythin' what it done to her ?--that--that--" Old Tom's face worked convulsively. Nancy's lips relaxed a little. "I wish ye WOULD call it somethin', Mr.Tom an' somethin' good an' strong, too.
Drat it! Ter think of its runnin' down our little girl! I always hated the evil-smellin' things, anyhow--I did, I did!" "But where is she hurt ?" "I don't know, I don't know," moaned Nancy.
"There's a little cut on her blessed head, but 'tain't bad--that ain't--Miss Polly says.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|