the couch and, passing his hand
across his bald and shining head, said:
"Ah! if I were a minister, it would not take long, no, it would not be
very long.... You have read that article on Algerian cotton. One of two
things, either irrigation.... But you are not listening to me, and yet
it is a more serious matter than you think."
He rose, and with his hands in his pocket, walked across the room
humming an old medical student's song. I followed him closely.
"Jacques," said I, as he turned round, "tell me frankly, are you
satisfied?"
"Yes, yes, I am satisfied... observe my untroubled look," and he broke
into his hearty and somewhat noisy laugh.
"You are not hiding anything from me, my dear fellow?"
"What a donkey you are, old fellow. I tell you that everything is going
on well."
And he resumed his song, jingling the money in his pockets.
"All is going on well, but it will take some time," he went on. "Let
me have one of your dressing-gowns. I shall be more comfortable for the
night, and these ladies will excuse me, will they not?"
"Excuse you, I should think so, you, the doctor, and my friend!" I felt
devotedly attached to him that evening.
"Well, then, if they will excuse me, you can very well let me have a
pair of slippers."
At this moment a cry came from the next room and we distinctly heard
these words in a stifled voice:
"Doctor... oh! mon Dieu!... doctor!"
"It is frightful," murmured my aunts.
"My dear friend," I exclaimed, seizing the doctor's arm, "you are quite
sure you are not concealing anything from me?"
"If you have a very loose pair they will suit me best; I have not
the foot of a young girl.... I am not concealing anything, I am not
concealing anything.... What do you think I should hide from you? It is
all going on very well, only as I said it will take time--By the way,
tell Joseph to get me one of your smokingcaps; once in dressing-gown and
slippers a smokingcap is not out of the way, and I am getting bald, my
dear Captain. How infernally cold it is here! These windows face the
north, and there are no sand-bags. Mademoiselle de V.," he added,
turning to my aunt, "you will catch cold."
Then as other sounds were heard, he said: "Let us go and see the little
lady."
"Come here," said my wife, who had caught sight of me, in a low voice,
"come here and shake hands with me." Then she drew me toward her and
whispered in my ear: "You will be pleased to kiss the little darlin
|