A gaunt creature, wobbling between dignity and weakness, made her first appearance on the terrace. She chose the lounge chair that was between one occupied by a woman with transparent ringed hands and another containing an abnormally clerical parson, with a collar like a retaining wall.

When the new patient was tucked, pillowed, hot-water-bottled and smelling-salted, she turned to the clergyman.

“My first time up.”

Silence.

“I am free of temperature and cough!”

Still silence.

She tilted the pink tam a little more, sparkled her eyes, smiled at the parson.

He sank down into the protective starched circle of collar. A pair of pale hands raised a drab-bound volume up, up, till his face was gone.

“Nurse! Nurse Maggie! Face me the other way.”

On readjustment she enquired of Rings, “Are you normal?” Rings glowered. “Temperature, of course. This wild life is said to be healing. Detestably monotonous, I must say.”

Rings bowed coldly.

The newcomer shook out her knitting; her needles clicked angrily.

Up piped a childish treble, “Mrs.—, Mrs. New Lady. Perhaps no one has told you; it’s the San way not to mention temperature or coughs. Those things are only Doctor’s business here. We are not allowed to talk sickness.”

“And who may you be, Miss Pert?”

“I’m Jenny. What is your name, please?”

“Mrs. Viney. Pray, Jenny, what are we permitted to talk about in this place where nothing ever happens?”

Jenny looked across the lawn. “Well, there’s birds, Mrs. Viney.”

“Birds and to spare making bedlam of day and night!”

A bell clanged; silence fell upon the terrace; every soul either there or in his room was sucking a thermometer and quiet. It was the noon Rest Hour.

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