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The Mischief-maker
E. Phillips Oppenheim
The Mischief-maker
E. Phillips Oppenheim
The girl who was dying lay in an invalid chair piled up with cushions in a sheltered corner of the lawn. The woman who had come to visit her had deliberately turned away her head with a murmured word about the sunshine and the field of buttercups. Behind them was the little sanitarium, a gray stone villa built in the style of a château, overgrown with creepers, and with terraced lawns stretching down to the sunny corner to which the girl had been carried earlier in the day. There were flowers everywhere - beds of hyacinths, and borders of purple and yellow crocuses. A lilac tree was bursting into blossom, the breeze was soft and full of life. Below, beyond the yellow-starred field of which the woman had spoken, flowed the Seine, and in the distance one could see the outskirts of Paris. "The doctor says I am better," the girl whispered plaintively. "This morning he was quite cheerful. I suppose he knows, but it is strange that I should feel so weak - weaker even day by day. And my cough - it tears me to pieces all the time."
Media | Books Hardcover Book (Book with hard spine and cover) |
Released | February 8, 2006 |
ISBN13 | 9781421800219 |
Publishers | 1st World Library - Literary Society |
Pages | 428 |
Dimensions | 137 × 26 × 213 mm · 675 g |
Language | English |
Contributor | 1stworld Library |
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