[Little Novels by Wilkie Collins]@TWC D-Link bookLittle Novels CHAPTER XI 29/249
He has the usual medical prejudice against sugar-plums." With that quaint warning, he, too, made his bow and discreetly withdrew. Thinking it over afterward, I acknowledged to myself that the English Captain--although he was the handsomest man of the two, and possessed the smoothest manners--had failed, nevertheless, to overcome my shyness. The American traveler's unaffected sincerity and good-humor, on the other hand, set me quite at my ease.
I could look at him and thank him, and feel amused at his sympathy with the grimace I had made, after swallowing the ill-flavored waters.
And yet, while I lay awake at night, wondering whether we should meet our new acquaintances on the next day, it was the English Captain that I most wanted to see again, and not the American traveler! At the time, I set this down to nothing more important than my own perversity.
Ah, dear! dear! I know better than that now. The next morning brought the doctor to our hotel on a special visit to my aunt.
He invented a pretext for sending me into the next room, which was so plainly a clumsy excuse that my curiosity was aroused.
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