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E. W. Hornung: Raffles: Further Adventures of the Amateur Cracksman6. AN OLD FLAME (continued)"Are you going?" he demanded. The traps in my hands proclaimed that I was, but I dropped them at his feet to have it out with him then and there. "Yes," I answered fiercely, "thanks to you!" "Well, my good fellow," he said, his full-blooded face lightening and softening at the same time, as though a load were off his mind, "it's no pleasure to me to deprive any man of his billet, but you never were a nurse, and you know that as well as I do." I began to wonder what he meant, and how much he did know, and my speculations kept me silent. "But come in here a moment," he continued, just as I decided that he knew nothing at all. And, leading me into his minute consulting-room, Dr. Theobald solemnly presented me with a sovereign by way of compensation, which I pocketed as solemnly, and with as much gratitude as if I had not fifty of them distributed over my person as it was. The good fellow had quite forgotten my social status, about which he himself had been so particular at our earliest interview; but he had never accustomed himself to treat me as a gentleman, and I do not suppose he had been improving his memory by the tall tumbler which I saw him poke behind a photograph as we entered. "There's one thing I should like to know before I go," said I, turning suddenly on the doctor's mat, "and that is whether Mr. Maturin is really ill or not!" I meant, of course, at the present moment, but Dr. Theobald braced himself like a recruit at the drill-sergeant's voice. "Of course he is," he snapped--"so ill as to need a nurse who can nurse, by way of a change." With that his door shut in my face, and I had to go my way, in the dark as to whether he had mistaken my meaning, and was telling me a lie, or not. This is page 117 of 162. [Mark this Page]
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