Part Three Chapter Fourteen
—did: I washed my face
and tand, eet my eful tartan goidy -go to tea and gave me a basin of it, I took it, but did not drink it. I tipped it on t no-one steamed for a second, t my foot on tipped it. I looked up, and saty ching.
Made a mess, she said loudly. She had a voice like a mans. Bad girl.
Bad girl? said Nurse Bacon, turning round. I knoo your bed. Quick! quick! all of you. God bless me, w a life!
So be quiet, o lie still. If , t first nigurned and trembled. Stop moving!
S up, reading, and t of er doo a ligill burning, so sirred in t; and t straigo sleep and started snoring. han ever.
Sook o bed about her neck.
I lay e glove in my fist, and no tip of one of its fingers to my mout ; and I bit and bit.
But I slept, at last; and ors came back on th Nurse Spiller, I was ready.
Mrs Rivers, ie, after ty a minute looking over Mrs Price and Miss ilson.
I am perfectly clear in my head, I said.
ch. Splendid!
Dr Cie, I beg you—!
I dipped my old ory, all over again— Maud Rivers, but in errible trick; Briar as Maud Lillys servant, so I migero be mad. aken une, all for themselves.
t you! You dont believe me? Bring anyone from Briar! Bring t c t to them, my own!
are you calling it, norinder?
Susan— No! I said. Not in t book. It is Susan Smithere.
Susan Smith, again!
Only in t it. you see?
But no o look grim. I you say too muced. e cannot . e