“You could say I painted it for him.”
“So I will. That will do him no harm neither. Shall I say I found you crying over it?”
“Oh, no! no! That would make him cry too, perhaps.”
“Ah, I forgot that. Grace, you are an angel.”
“Ah, no. But you can tell him I am—if you think so. That will do him no great harm—will it?”
“Not an atom to him; but it will subject me to a pinch for stale news. There, give me my patient's picture, and let me go.”
She kissed the little picture half-furtively, and gave it him, and let him go; only, as he went out at the door, she murmured, “Come often.”
Now, when this artful doctor got outside the door, his face became grave all of a sudden, for he had seen enough to give him a degree of anxiety he had not betrayed to his interesting patient herself.
“Well, doctor?” said Mr. Carden, affecting more cheerfulness than he felt. “Nothing there beyond your skill, I suppose?”
“Her health is declining rapidly. Pale, hollow-eyed, listless, languid—not the same girl.”