Chapter Eight
I am perfectly not trouble. I am only tired, suddenly. I am sorry.
Sorry? Poorey. It is , and overtask your niece most miserably.
I al, and ake your mistresss arm. Go steadily, now.
Sairs? Mr ands in to mount t I do not catch his eye.
me for some cool to put upon my face. I finally go to tel, and lean my c the looking-glass.
Your skirts, miss! says Agnes. She fire.
I feel queer, dislocated. t c sounds, I ter. I t kno, ands aill gathered in her hands.
trikes. I step back, t beats a little smoots me in my bed, unlooses tains—no mig, any at all. I ening my ains I to be taken y as she slumbers.
, I unlock my little rait. I close my eyes. I t study your face!—but, once it, I kno do it or lie sleepless and grow ill. I look o her, he said, and feel her madness in you?
Do I?
I put trait ao bring me a tumbler of er. I take a drop of my old medicine—t t ake anotill, my back. My o tingle. Agnes stands and s. doe stuff of dress. One slender collar-bone is marked a delicate blue is
per mig remember—be a bruise.
I feel t last, sour in my stomach.
ts all, I say. Go on.
I o s. ter a little time t groan of macing its gears. I lie and for sleep. It does not come. Instead, my limbs groless and begin to tcoo of it, at ts of my fingers and my toes. I raise my ly: Agnes! S fears to ans last, t up, lie still. trikes. tairs: tlemen are leaving to te chambers.
Per if I do, it is only