Anne of the Island eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 307 pages of information about Anne of the Island.

Anne of the Island eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 307 pages of information about Anne of the Island.

“Yes, and I believe it’s the very girl we saw at Redmond this morning.  I’ve been watching her for five minutes.  She has started to come up the avenue exactly half a dozen times, and half a dozen times has she turned and gone back.  Either she’s dreadfully shy or she has got something on her conscience.  Let’s go and meet her.  It’s easier to get acquainted in a graveyard than at Redmond, I believe.”

They walked down the long grassy arcade towards the stranger, who was sitting on a gray slab under an enormous willow.  She was certainly very pretty, with a vivid, irregular, bewitching type of prettiness.  There was a gloss as of brown nuts on her satin-smooth hair and a soft, ripe glow on her round cheeks.  Her eyes were big and brown and velvety, under oddly-pointed black brows, and her crooked mouth was rose-red.  She wore a smart brown suit, with two very modish little shoes peeping from beneath it; and her hat of dull pink straw, wreathed with golden-brown poppies, had the indefinable, unmistakable air which pertains to the “creation” of an artist in millinery.  Priscilla had a sudden stinging consciousness that her own hat had been trimmed by her village store milliner, and Anne wondered uncomfortably if the blouse she had made herself, and which Mrs. Lynde had fitted, looked very countrified and home-made besides the stranger’s smart attire.  For a moment both girls felt like turning back.

But they had already stopped and turned towards the gray slab.  It was too late to retreat, for the brown-eyed girl had evidently concluded that they were coming to speak to her.  Instantly she sprang up and came forward with outstretched hand and a gay, friendly smile in which there seemed not a shadow of either shyness or burdened conscience.

“Oh, I want to know who you two girls are,” she exclaimed eagerly.  “I’ve been dying to know.  I saw you at Redmond this morning.  Say, wasn’t it awful there?  For the time I wished I had stayed home and got married.”

Anne and Priscilla both broke into unconstrained laughter at this unexpected conclusion.  The brown-eyed girl laughed, too.

“I really did.  I could have, you know.  Come, let’s all sit down on this gravestone and get acquainted.  It won’t be hard.  I know we’re going to adore each other—­I knew it as soon as I saw you at Redmond this morning.  I wanted so much to go right over and hug you both.”

“Why didn’t you?” asked Priscilla.

“Because I simply couldn’t make up my mind to do it.  I never can make up my mind about anything myself—­I’m always afflicted with indecision.  Just as soon as I decide to do something I feel in my bones that another course would be the correct one.  It’s a dreadful misfortune, but I was born that way, and there is no use in blaming me for it, as some people do.  So I couldn’t make up my mind to go and speak to you, much as I wanted to.”

“We thought you were too shy,” said Anne.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Anne of the Island from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.