Alice was very beautiful. Her hair
was black and curling, and she preferred to wear it pulled back from her face.
She always painted her lips and nails a ripe pink, complementing her dark eyes
and pale complexion. Her little nose turned slightly up at the end—a trait her
children, grandchildren, and grandchildren’s children failed to inherit.
It is said that the first time the
Doctor beheld Alice, he declared, ‘That’s the girl I’m going to marry!’
No such thing had ever been said
of Mary Anne. Or Anne, for that matter.
* * *
Beautiful Alice answered the
phones in the lobby of the Med School. Staked behind a desk, she watched the
students, professors, doctors come and go, clack clacking across the marble
floor.
Usually plenty of people stopped
by her station for idle chatter, but today was different. Rain drummed on the
windows; Alice drummed her pink fingernails against her cheek. There was
nothing doing. Occasionally wet shoes squeaked through the door with the rustle
of umbrella and exhalation of breath—but it was otherwise still.
She sighed at the thought of the
magazine she had left on her bedside table; reading material was scarce and she
was quite bored if she cared to admit it.
Really quite bored indeed. With a
slender finger she pushed an apple to edge of her desk. The fruit teetered on
the brink and Alice was obliged to scramble and rescue it back again. Absurdly,
the apple’s brush with death brought colour to Alice’s cheeks and made her
heart flutter. Never mind, for when the Doctor stumbled into the lobby, she was
rendered all the more radiant by her excitement.
* * *
Of course, the Doctor was not yet
a doctor and he had forgotten his umbrella that morning. The ambitious student entered
the building sodden and dripping, the pages of an ineffectual newspaper limp
between his fingers.
His equally drenched friend
skittered in after him exclaiming, ‘Dammit all!’
As the exclamation echoed through
the lobby, the two men (boys) bent double with laughter.
Alice narrowed her eyes at the
delinquents… although… was one of them handsome?—the one with the silly
newspaper umbrella and the full lips?
Miraculously, Frances appeared at
Alice’s shoulder with some pretence of a memo in her hand and gossip on her
lips. Alice turned her best silhouette to the ambitious student and spoke to
Frances with self-conscious animation.
For Frances, Alice had charming
smiles and merry laughter. [Frances fancied herself quite hilarious all of the
sudden!]
She could feel eyes on her—those
dark eyes beneath the dripping, black head of hair—as she rambled on, flirting
at nothing, flirting with the air around her.
Then, perfectly placed, one
haughty look in his direction—fleeting under arched eyebrows.
At last, when Frances was gone, Alice
looked down so her black lashes showed to their best advantage against her
white cheek.
* * *
Robert was transfixed. And very
soggy.
Paul was saying something to him,
they had been laughing—who the hell cared—he was transfixed by the dark-haired
beauty guarding the phones.
She paid him no mind, wet dog that
he was. She was engaged in conversation with homely red head—lucky receiver of
smiles and looks! Her laughter bounced sweetly off the walls while her delicate
fingers were engaged in twisting the stem of an apple.
In an instant, the beauty’s eyes
flashed to meet his and then away, sending a thrill through his breast.
The stem snapped from the apple
and her feathery lashes drooped to survey the damage.
He felt sick, he felt sweaty.
Grabbing Paul by the elbow, Robert
declared, ‘That’s the girl I’m going to marry!’