The White Linen Nurse

Eleanor Hallowell Abbott
The White Linen Nurse

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Title: The White Linen Nurse
Author: Eleanor Hallowell Abbott
Release Date: December 29, 2004 [EBook #14506]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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The White Linen Nurse
By Eleanor Hallowell Abbott
Author of "Molly Make-Believe," "The Sick-a-Bed Lady," etc., etc.
1913

TO MAURICE HOWE RICHARDSON
WHO LOVED ROMANCE ALMOST AS MUCH AS HE LOVED SURGERY, THIS
LITTLE STORY IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED IN TOKEN OF TWO
PERSONS' UNFADING MEMORIES

THE WHITE LINEN NURSE

CHAPTER I
The White Linen Nurse was so tired that her noble expression ached.
Incidentally her head ached and her shoulders ached and her lungs ached and the
ankle-bones of both feet ached quite excruciatingly. But nothing of her felt permanently
incapacitated except her noble expression. Like a strip of lip-colored lead suspended from

her poor little nose by two tugging wire-gray wrinkles her persistently conscientious
sickroom smile seemed to be whanging aimlessly against her front teeth. The sensation
certainly was very unpleasant.
Looking back thus on the three spine-curving, chest-cramping, foot-twinging,
ether-scented years of her hospital training, it dawned on the White Linen Nurse very
suddenly that nothing of her ever had felt permanently incapacitated except her noble
expression!
Impulsively she sprang for the prim white mirror that capped her prim white bureau and
stood staring up into her own entrancing, bright-colored Novia Scotian reflection with
tense and unwonted interest.
Except for the unmistakable smirk which fatigue had clawed into her plastic young
mouth-lines there was certainly nothing special the matter with what she saw.
"Perfectly good face!" she attested judicially with no more than common courtesy to her
progenitors. "Perfectly good and tidy looking face! If only--if only--" her breath caught a
trifle. "If only--it didn't look so disgustingly noble and--hygienic--and dollish!"
All along the back of her neck little sharp prickly pains began suddenly to sting and burn.
"Silly--simpering--pink and white puppet!" she scolded squintingly, "I'll teach you how
to look like a real girl!"
Very threateningly she raised herself to her tiptoes and thrust her glowing, corporeal face
right up into the moulten, elusive, quick-silver face in the mirror. Pink for pink, blue for
blue, gold for gold, dollish smirk for dollish smirk, the mirror mocked her seething inner
fretfulness.
"Why--darn you!" she gasped. "Why--darn you! Why, you looked more human than that
when you left the Annapolis Valley three years ago! There were at least--tears in your
face then, and--cinders, and--your mother's best advice, and the worry about the mortgage,
and--and--the blush of Joe Hazeltine's kiss!"
Furtively with the tip of her index-finger she started to search her imperturbable pink
cheek for the spot where Joe Hazeltine's kiss had formerly flamed.
"My hands are all right, anyway!" she acknowledged with infinite relief. Triumphantly
she raised both strong, stub-fingered, exaggeratedly executive hands to the level of her
childish blue eyes and stood surveying the mirrored effect with ineffable satisfaction.
"Why my hands are--dandy!" she gloated. "Why they're perfectly--dandy! Why they're
wonderful! Why they're--." Then suddenly and fearfully she gave a shrill little scream.
"But they don't go with my silly doll-face!" she cried. "Why, they don't! They don't! They
go with the Senior Surgeon's scowling Heidelberg eyes! They go with the Senior
Surgeon's grim gray jaw! They go with the--! Oh! what shall I do? What shall I do?"
Dizzily, with her stubby finger-tips prodded deep into every jaded facial muscle that she

could compass, she staggered towards the air, and dropping down into the first friendly
chair that bumped against her knees, sat staring blankly out across the monotonous city
roofs that flanked her open window,--trying very, very hard for the first time in her life,
to consider the General-Phenomenon-of-Being-a-Trained-Nurse.
All around and about her, inexorable as anesthesia, horrid as the hush of tomb or public
library, lurked the painfully unmistakable sense of institutional restraint. Mournfully to
her ear from some remote kitcheny region of pots and pans a browsing spoon tinkled
forth from time to time with soft-muffled resonance. Up and down every clammy white
corridor innumerable young feet, born to prance and stamp, were creeping stealthily to
and fro in rubber-heeled whispers. Along the somber fire-escape just below her
windowsill, like a covey of snubbed doves, six or eight of her classmates were cooing
and crooning together with excessive caution concerning the imminent graduation
exercises that
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