The days slipped by in pleasant and even tenor. The summer burned

itself out in a riot of glorious colors, the harvest was gathered in,

and the ripe apples fell from the trees--and there was a wail of coming

winter to the night wind. Anna Moore had made her place in the

Bartlett family. The Squire could not imagine how he ever got along

without her; she always thought of everyone's comfort and remembered

their little individual likes and dislikes, till the whole household

grew to depend on her.

But she never spoke of herself nor referred to her family, friends or

manner of living, before coming to the Bartlett farm.

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When she had first come among them, her beauty had caused a little

ripple of excitement among the neighbors; the young men, in particular,

were all anxious to take her to husking bees and quilting parties, but

she always had some excellent excuse for not going, and while her

refusals were offered with the utmost kindness, there was a quiet

dignity about the girl that made any attempt at rustic playfulness or

familiarity impossible.

Sanderson came to the house from time to time, but Anna treated him

precisely as she would have treated any other young man who came to the

Squire's. She was the family "help," her duty stopped in announcing

the guests--or sometimes, and then she felt that fate had been

particularly cruel--in waiting on him at table.

Once or twice when Sanderson had found her alone, he had attempted to

speak to her. But she silenced him with a look that seat him away

cowering like a whipped cur. If he had any interest in any member of

the Squire's family, Anna did not notice it. He was an ugly scar on

her memory, and when not actually in his presence she tried to forget

that he lived.




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