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قراءة كتاب Red Pepper's Patients With an Account of Anne Linton's Case in Particular
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Red Pepper's Patients With an Account of Anne Linton's Case in Particular
RED PEPPER'S PATIENTS
WITH AN ACCOUNT OF ANNE LINTON'S CASE IN PARTICULAR
BY
GRACE S. RICHMOND

Garden City New York
DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
1918
CONTENTS
CHAPTER | ||
I. | An Intelligent Prescription | 3 |
II. | Little Hungary | 26 |
III. | Anne Linton's Temperature | 54 |
IV. | Two Red Heads | 65 |
V. | Susquehanna | 81 |
VI. | Heavy Local Mails | 102 |
VII. | White Lilacs | 118 |
VIII. | Expert Diagnosis | 133 |
IX. | Jordan Is a Man | 150 |
X. | The Surgical Firing Line | 162 |
XI. | The Only Safe Place | 175 |
XII. | The Truth About Susquehanna | 190 |
XIII. | Red Headed Again | 213 |
XIV. | A Strange Day | 222 |
XV. | Cleared Decks | 234 |
XVI. | White Lilacs Again | 249 |
XVII. | Red's Dearest Patients | 264 |
RED PEPPER'S PATIENTS
CHAPTER I
AN INTELLIGENT PRESCRIPTION
The man in the silk-lined, London-made overcoat, holding his hat firmly on his head lest the January wind send its expensive perfection into the gutter, paused to ask his way of the man with no overcoat, his hands shoved into his ragged pockets, his shapeless headgear crowded down over his eyes, red and bleary with the piercing wind.
"Burns?" repeated the second man to the question of the first. "Doc Burns? Sure! Next house beyond the corner—the brick one." He turned to point. "Tell it by the rigs hitched. It's his office hours. You'll do some waitin', tell ye that."
The questioner smiled—a slightly superior smile. "Thank you," he said, and passed on. He arrived at the corner and paused briefly, considering the row of vehicles in front of the old, low-lying brick house with its comfortable, white-pillared porches. The row was indeed a formidable one and suggested many waiting people within the house. But after an instant's hesitation he turned up the gravel path toward the wing of the house upon whose door could be seen the lettering of an inconspicuous sign. As he came near he made out that the sign read "R.P. Burns, M.D.," and that the table of office hours below set forth that the present hour was one of those designated.
"I'll get a line on your practice, Red," said the stranger to himself, and laid hand upon the doorbell. "Incidentally, perhaps, I'll get a line on why you stick to a small suburban town like this when you might be in the thick of things. A fellow whom I've twice met in Vienna, too. I can't understand it."
A fair-haired young woman in a white uniform and cap admitted the newcomer and pointed him to the one chair left unoccupied in the large and crowded waiting-room. It was a pleasant room, in a well-worn sort of way, and the blazing wood fire in a sturdy fireplace, the rows of dull-toned books cramming a solid phalanx of bookcases, and a number of interesting old prints on the walls gave it, as the stranger, lifting critical eyes, was obliged to admit to himself, a curious air of dignity in spite of the mingled atmosphere of drugs and patients which assailed his fastidious nostrils. As for the patients