“I feel so queer. What’s happened to me? Where—where am I?” she asked.
Robin had the wisdom to answer her quite simply and naturally, telling her in a few words just what had occurred, and, her mind once set at rest, she lay back quietly and very soon dropped off into a sleep of sheer exhaustion. Afterwards followed a timeless period marked by the comings and goings of Maria with hot-water bottles and steaming cups of milk or broth, alternating with intervals of profound slumber. Through it all, waking or sleeping, ran a thread of wearisome pain—limbs so stiff and flesh so bruised that it seemed to Ann as though the wontedly comfortable mattress on which she lay had been stuffed with lumps of coal.
One break occurred in the ordered sequence of sleep and nourishment. This happened when Tony quitted Silverquay to rejoin his uncle. The day following Ann’s enforced retirement to bed, a brusque letter had come from the old man, in which he concealed a genuine longing to have his nephew with him again beneath an irritable suggestion that he was probably outstaying his welcome at the Cottage. Robin laughingly reassured Tony upon the latter point, but at the same time he agreed that the young man’s return to Lorne might be advisable, since it was obvious Sir Philip was feeling his loneliness considerably more than the proud old autocrat was willing to confess.
So Tony had tiptoed up to Ann’s room, when she had roused herself sufficiently to wish him good-bye and bestow upon him a parting injunction “to be good.” After which she dropped back once more into the lethargy of weakness, painfully conscious of the fact that relief was only to be found in lying torpidly still and silent.
But all things come to an end in time—though the disagreeable ones seem to take much longer over it than the nice ones—and at the end of a few days Ann was able to sit up in bed without groaning and take an intelligent interest in the fact that her room was lavishly adorned with roses.
“Where did all the flowers come from?” she demanded of Maria.
“Why, ‘tis Mr. Forrester what sends they, miss,” came the answer, uttered with much satisfaction. Brett had a “way” with him against which even downright Maria Coombe was not proof. “He’ve a-called here to inquire every day since you was took bad. Very attentive and gentlemanlike, I call’t.”
“Very,” agreed Ann with becoming gravity. “And who else—hasn’t any one else”—correcting herself quickly—“been to inquire?”.
“‘Deed they have! ‘Twas ‘Can’t I see Miss Lovell to-day, Maria?’ with first one and then t’other of them. But I told them all the same”—with grim triumph. “‘Not till I gives the word,’ I told them.”
“Who has called, then?” asked Ann curiously.