[The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington]@TWC D-Link bookThe Magnificent Ambersons CHAPTER XVI 1/14
"Aunt Fanny doesn't look much better," George said to his mother, a few minutes after their arrival, on the night they got home.
He stood with a towel in her doorway, concluding some sketchy ablutions before going downstairs to a supper which Fanny was hastily preparing for them. Isabel had not telegraphed; Fanny was taken by surprise when they drove up in a station cab at eleven o'clock; and George instantly demanded "a little decent food." (Some criticisms of his had publicly disturbed the composure of the dining-car steward four hours previously.) "I never saw anybody take things so hard as she seems to," he observed, his voice muffled by the towel.
"Doesn't she get over it at all? I thought she'd feel better when we turned over the insurance to her--gave it to her absolutely, without any strings to it.
She looks about a thousand years old!" "She looks quite girlish, sometimes, though," his mother said. "Has she looked that way much since father--" "Not so much," Isabel said thoughtfully.
"But she will, as times goes on." "Time'll have to hurry, then, it seems to me," George observed, returning to his own room. When they went down to the dining room, he pronounced acceptable the salmon salad, cold beef, cheese, and cake which Fanny made ready for them without disturbing the servants.
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