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appeared--leaving behind a trinket and a rent scrap of purple gauze. CHAPTER XXXIX Six weeks later Coombe was driven again up the climbing road to Darreuch. There was something less of colour than usual in his face, but the slightly vivid look of shock observing persons had been commenting upon had died out. As he had travelled, leaning back upon the cushions of the railway carriage, he had kept his eyes closed for the greater part of the journey. When at last he began to open them and look out at the increasingly beautiful country he also began to look rested and calm. He already felt the nearing peace of the shrine and added to it was an immense relaxing and uplift. A girl of a type entirely different from Robin's might, he knew, have made him feel during the past months as if he were taking part in a melodrama. This she had wholly saved him from by the clear simplicity of her natural acceptance of all things as they were. She had taken and given without a word. He was, as it were, going home to her now, as deeply thrilled and moved as a totally different type of man might have gone--a man who was simpler. The things he might once have been and felt were at work within him. Again he longed to see the girl--he _wanted_ to see her. He was going to the castle in response to a telegram from Dowie. All was well over. She was safe. For the rest, all calamity had been kept from her knowledge and, as he had arranged it, the worst would never reach her. In course of time she would learn all it was necessary that she should know of her mother's death. When Mrs. Macaur led him to one of his own rooms she glowed red and expectantly triumphant. "The young lady, your lordship--it was wonderfu'!" But before she had time to say more Dowie had appeared and her face was smooth and serene to marvellousness. "The Almighty himself has been in this place, my lord," she said devoutly. "I didn't send more than a word, because she's like a schoolroom child about it. She wants to tell you herself." The woman was quivering with pure joy. "May I see her?" "She's waiting, my lord." Honey scents of gorse and heather blew softly through the open windows of the room he was taken to. He did not know enough of such things to be at all sure what he had expected to see--but what he moved quickly towards, the moment after his entrance, was Robin lying fair as a wild rose on her pillows--not pale, not tragic, but with her e
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