Quicksand
some time before she herself had announced the fact, intervened, saying firmly: “I think it might be better if you didn‘t try to talk to her now. She‘s terribly sick and weak yet. She‘s still got some fever and we mustn‘t excite her or she‘s liable to slip back. And we don‘t want that, do we?”
No, the man, her husband, responded, they didn‘t want that. Reluctantly he went from the room with a last look at Helga, who was lying on her back with one frail, pale hand under her small head, her curly black hair scattered loose on the pillow. She regarded him from behind dropped lids. The day was hot, her breasts were covered only by a nightgown of filmy crêpe, a relic of prematrimonial days, which had slipped from one carved shoulder. He flinched. Helga‘s petulant lip curled, for she well knew that this fresh reminder of her desirability was like the flick of a whip. Miss Hartley carefully closed the door after the retreating husband. “It‘s time,” she
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