This seemed so much less than calling on Mr. Peck that Annie looked out at

Mrs. Munger's basket-phaeton at her gate, and knew that she would go with

very little more urgence.

"After all, you know, you're not one of his congregation; he may yield to

them," said Mrs. Munger. "We must _have_ him--if only because he's

hard to get. It'll give us an idea of what we've got to contend with."

It had a very practical sound; it was really like meeting the difficulties

on their own ground, and it overcame the question of taste which was

rising in Annie's mind. She demurred a little more upon the theory of her

uselessness; but Mrs. Munger insisted, and carried her off down the village

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street.

The air sparkled full of sun, and a breeze from the south-west frolicked

with the twinkling leaves of the overarching elms, and made their shadows

dance on the crisp roadway, packed hard by the rain, and faced with clean

sand, which crackled pleasantly under Mrs. Munger's phaeton wheels. She

talked incessantly. "I think we'll go first to Mrs. Gerrish's, and then to

Mrs. Wilmington's. You know them?"

"Oh yes; they were old girl friends."

"Then you know why I go to Mrs. Gerrish's first. She'll care a great deal,

and Mrs. Wilmington won't care at all. She's a delicious creature, Mrs.

Wilmington--don't you think? That large, indolent nature; Mr. Brandreth

says she makes him think of 'the land in which it seemed always

afternoon.'"

Annie remembered Lyra Goodman as a long, lazy, red-haired girl who laughed

easily; and she could not readily realise her in the character of a

Titian-esque beauty with a gift for humorous dramatics, which she had

filled out into during the years of her absence from Hatboro'; but she said

"Oh yes," in the necessity of polite acquiescence, and Mrs. Munger went on

talking-"She's the only one of the Old Hatboro' people, so far as I know them, who

has any breadth of view. Whoa!" She pulled up suddenly beside a stout,

short lady in a fashionable walking dress, who was pushing an elegant

perambulator with one hand, and shielding her complexion with a crimson

sun-umbrella in the other.

"Mrs. Gerrish!" Mrs. Munger called; and Mrs. Gerrish, who had already

looked around at the approaching phaeton, and then looked away, so as not

to have seemed to look, stopped abruptly, and after some exploration of the

vicinity, discovered where the voice came from.

"Oh, Mrs. Munger!" she called back, bridling with pleasure at being greeted

in that way by the chief lady of South Hatboro', and struggling to keep up

a dignified indifference at the same time. "Why, Annie!" she added.




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