The White Linen Nurse | Page 2

Eleanor Hallowell Abbott
were to take place at eight o'clock that very evening. Beyond her dreariest
ken of muffled voices, beyond her dingiest vista of slate and brick, on a far faint hillside,
a far faint streak of April green went roaming jocundly skyward. Altogether sluggishly,
as though her nostrils were plugged with warm velvet, the smell of spring and ether and
scorched mutton-chops filtered in and out, in and out, in and out, of her abnormally jaded
senses.
Taken all in all it was not a propitious afternoon for any girl as tired and as pretty as the
White Linen Nurse to be considering the general phenomenon of anything--except April!
In the real country, they tell me, where the Young Spring runs wild and bare as a nymph
through every dull brown wood and hay-gray meadow, the blasé farmer-lad will not even
lift his eyes from the plow to watch the pinkness of her passing. But here in the prudish
brick-minded city where the Young Spring at her friskiest is nothing more audacious than
a sweltering, winter-swathed madcap, who has impishly essayed some fine morning to
tiptoe down street in her soft, sloozily, green, silk-stockinged feet, the whole hob-nailed
population reels back aghast and agrin before the most innocent flash of the rogue's
green-veiled toes. And then, suddenly snatching off its own cumbersome winter
foot-habits, goes chasing madly after her, in its own prankish, vari-colored socks.
Now the White Linen Nurse's socks were black, and cotton at that, a combination
incontestably sedate. And the White Linen Nurse had waded barefoot through too many
posied country pastures to experience any ordinary city thrill over the sight of a single
blade of grass pushing scarily through a crack in the pavement, or puny,
concrete-strangled maple tree flushing wanly to the smoky sky. Indeed for three hustling,
square-toed, rubber-heeled city years the White Linen Nurse had never even stopped to
notice whether the season was flavored with frost or thunder. But now, unexplainably,
just at the end of it all, sitting innocently there at her own prim little bed-room window,
staring innocently out across indomitable roof-tops,--with the crackle of glory and
diplomas already ringing in her ears,--she heard, instead, for the first time in her life, the
gaily dare-devil voice of the spring, a hoydenish challenge flung back at her, leaf-green,
from the crest of a winter-scarred hill.
"Hello, White Linen Nurse!" screamed the saucy city spring. "Hello, White Linen Nurse!

Take off your homely starched collar! Or your silly candy-box cap! Or any other thing
that feels maddeningly artificial! And come out! And be very wild!"
Like a puppy dog cocking its head towards some strange, unfamiliar sound, the White
Linen Nurse cocked her head towards the lure of the green-crested hill. Still wrestling
conscientiously with the General-Phenomenon-of-Being-a-Trained-Nurse she found her
collar suddenly very tight, the tiny cap inexpressibly heavy and vexatious. Timidly she
removed the collar--and found that the removal did not rest her in the slightest. Equally
timidly she removed the cap--and found that even that removal did not rest her in the
slightest. Then very, very slowly, but very, very permeatingly and completely, it dawned
on the White Linen Nurse that never while eyes were blue, and hair gold, and lips red,
would she ever find rest again until she had removed her noble expression!
With a jerk that started the pulses in her temples throbbing like two toothaches she
straightened up in her chair. All along the back of her neck the little blonde curls began to
crisp very ticklingly at their roots.
Still staring worriedly out over the old city's slate-gray head to that inciting prance of
green across the farthest horizon she felt her whole being kindle to an indescribable
passion of revolt against all Hushed Places. Seething with fatigue, smoldering with ennui,
she experienced suddenly a wild, almost incontrollable impulse to sing, to shout, to
scream from the housetops, to mock somebody, to defy everybody, to break laws, dishes,
heads,--anything in fact that would break with a crash! And then at last, over the hills and
far away, with all the outraged world at her heels, to run! And run! And run! And run!
And run! And laugh! Till her feet raveled out! And her lungs burst! And there was
nothing more left of her at all,--ever--ever--any more!
Discordantly into this rapturously pagan vision of pranks and posies broke one of her
room-mates all awhiff with ether, awhirr with starch.
Instantly with the first creak of the door-handle the White Linen Nurse was on her feet,
breathless, resentful, grotesquely defiant.
"Get out of here, Zillah Forsyth!" she cried furiously. "Get out of here--quick!--and leave
me alone! I want to think!"
Perfectly serenely the newcomer advanced into the room. With her pale, ivory-tinted
cheeks, her great limpid brown eyes,
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