[Robin by Frances Hodgson Burnett]@TWC D-Link bookRobin CHAPTER XIX 3/29
"You come to me day or night--_whatsoever_.
I'm not so old but what I can do anything--you want done." The railroad journey back to London seemed unnaturally long because her brain began to work when she found herself half blindly gazing at the country swiftly flying past the carriage window.
Perhaps the anxiousness in Mrs.Bennett's face had wakened thought in connecting itself with Lord Coombe's words and looks in the wood. When the door of the house in Eaton Square opened for her she was conscious of shrinking from the sympathetic eyes of the war-substituted woman-servant who was the one who had found her lying on the landing. She knew that her face was white and that her eyelids were stained and heavy and that the woman saw them and was sorry for her. The mountain climb of the stairs seemed long and steep but she reached her room at last and took off her hat and coat and put on her house dress.
She did it automatically as if she were going downstairs to her work, as though there had been no break in the order of her living. But as she was fastening the little hooks and buttons her stunned brain went on with the thought to which it had begun to awaken in the train. Since the hour when she had fallen unconscious on the landing she had not seemed to think at all.
She had only _felt_ things which had nothing to do with the real world. There was a fire in the grate and when the last button was fastened she sat down on a seat before it and looked into the redness of the coals, her hands loosely clasped on her knee.
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