“Poor Edith!” he murmured. “She couldn't look at me. She—”
“Nonsense!” Mrs. Sheridan, having let in the light at a window, came back to the bedside. “You look a great deal better than what you did before you went to the sanitarium, anyway. It's done you good; a body can see that right away. You need fatting up, of course, and you haven't got much color—”
“No,” he said, “I haven't much color.”
“But you will have when you get your strength back.”
“Oh yes!” he responded, cheerfully. “THEN I will.”
“You look a great deal better than what I expected.”
“Edith must have a great vocabulary!” he chuckled.
“She's too sensitive,” said Mrs. Sheridan, “and it makes her exaggerate a little. What about your diet?”
“That's all right. They told me to eat anything.”
“Anything at all?”