Whereupon Sally burst into tears and fled into the inner sanctum, leaving Peter wondering just what sort of 'not again' could be going on here. His imagination supplied him with plenty—and the likeliest, given the girl's tawdry, cheap taffeta dress, rouged cheeks, and kohled eyes, gave him a moment of queasiness.
However, before his first impulse to flee had managed to manifest itself, Sally reappeared, all smiles again. Whatever had been transacted within that surgery, it had not taken as long as—well, what he had feared would have taken. 'Yer a bleedin' saint, ye are,' the girl said as fervently as the mother had. 'I gotter get back—'
'Off with you, before that blackguard manager docks you for not being at rehearsal,' replied the doctor, making a shooing motion and coming fully into the light. 'And don't forget that if I'm not here, I'm generally at the Fleet, and you can come to me there.'
This was Peter's day for shock, it seemed. It was not merely enough that the Doctor M. Witherspoon was female—nor that she attended to women no
No, there was no doubt whatsoever in Captain Peter Scott's mind, he who had made the voyage to and from Calcutta any number of times, that Doctor M. Witherspoon was, if not fully Indian herself, certainly of half blood.
He rose to his feet, drawn by the sheer force of her personality. Stunningly attractive, despite the severe black twill skirt and suit coat, with its plain black blouse buttoned up to the chin and what
Which was, of course, his undoing. For he stood with his weight distributed equally on
She pierced him with those eyes, like an insect to be studied, and he felt a flush creeping up from his collar.
'Well,' she said at last, 'you certainly aren't having any difficulty with that leg
He swallowed, with some trouble. 'No,' he replied, in a very meek voice. 'At least, no more than usual.'
'Then shall we come into my office and discuss why you
He was not entirely certain that he was going to come out. At least, not in the same state—mental or physical, he was not sure—in which he had gone in.
PETER sat—carefully—on the single chair facing the doctor's desk, in a room that appeared to serve as study, initial consultation room, and office. The doctor studied him, her expression as serene as a bronze Buddha, and just as unreadable. He decided to show a bit more spine than he had for the past few moments, and studied her as well. Neither of them broke the silence; only the usual street sounds filtered in through the glass of the window facing the street—footsteps, hoofbeats, voices, and the occasional cough and chatter of a motorcar.
As he continued to gaze unabashedly at the doctor's face, taking in the nuances of her features, he became more and more certain that his first guess about her parentage was correct.
No, that surely wasn't possible; she looked too young. She must have begun her studies in her teens, and the