Abby made an irritable stab at a piece of synthetic potato on her plate. "Nonsense," she snapped. "You're talking like a silly schoolgirl."
On second thought, she decided that Linda was a silly schoolgirl and would naturally talk like one; she was still a little girl, dependent for protection upon her Aunt Abby. That thought gave her some measure of comfort.
"I feel like an amoeba sometimes," Linda said, poking restlessly at a piece of meat on her plate.
"Sometimes I wish you were, dear," Abby said, feeling strangely annoyed by the statement. "Now, eat your steak before it gets cold."
"Don't you ever get lonely, Aunt Abby," Linda asked. "Suppose Dr. Gower went away, wouldn't you be lonely."
"Dr. Gower is not going away," Abby pointed out.
"He might," Linda insisted. "You haven't seen him for three days now. He might be gone already."
Despite herself, Abby felt sudden panic. "He's probably busy. Doctors are busy these days."
"He could have called."
"Linda, eat your supper," Abby said sternly, "and stop this nonsense. Besides, what difference would it make. One person doesn't make the world begin or end. Dr. Gower and I are good friends, but we must adjust to these things. If he is gone away, he's gone, and that's all there is to it!"