down the path to meet the 
carriage. 
On each side of the path the spring blossoms were coming up, tulips 
and crocuses and hyacinths. Against the background of the gray house, 
an almond bush flung its branches of pink and white, and the grass was 
violet-starred. 
"Isn't that a picture, Judy," said the Judge to the girl beside him, as they 
drove up, "that little old house, with the flowers and Anne and her 
pets?" 
But Judy was looking at Anne with an uplifting of her dark, straight 
eyebrows. 
"She must be a queer girl," she said. 
"This is my granddaughter, Judy Jameson," was the Judge's 
introduction, when he had shaken hands with Anne. "She is going to 
live with me now, and I want you two to be great friends." 
To little country Anne, Judy seemed like a being from another world; 
she had never seen anything like the white hat with its wreath of violets, 
the straight white linen frock, the white cloth coat, and the low 
ribbon-tied shoes, and the unconscious air with which all these 
beautiful things were worn filled her with wonder. Why, a new ribbon 
on her own hat always set her happy heart a-flutter! 
She gave Judy a shy welcome, and Judy responded with a 
self-possession that made Anne's head whirl. 
"My dear Judge," said the little grandmother from the doorway, "I am 
glad you came. Come right in." 
"You are like your grandmother, my dear," she told Judy, "she and I 
were girls together, you know." 
Judy looked at the little, bent figure in the faded purple calico. "Oh,
were you," she said, indifferently, "I didn't know that grandmother ever 
lived in the country before she was married." 
"She didn't," explained the little grandmother, "but I lived in town, and 
we went to our first parties together, and became engaged at the same 
time, and we both of us married men from this county and came up 
here--" 
"And lived happy ever after," finished the Judge, with a smile on his 
fine old face, "like the people in your fairy books, Judy." 
"I don't read fairy books," said Judy, with a little curve of her upper lip. 
"Oh," said Anne, "don't you, don't you ever read them, Judy?" 
There was such wonder, almost horror, in her tone that Judy laughed. 
"Oh, I don't read much," she said. "There is so much else to do, and 
books are a bore." 
Anne looked at her with a little puzzled stare. "Don't you like 
books--really?" she asked, incredulously. 
"I hate them," said Judy calmly. 
Before Anne could recover from the shock of such a statement, the 
Judge waved the young people away. 
"Run along, run along," he ordered, "I want to talk to Mrs. Batcheller, 
you show Judy around a bit, Anne." 
"Anne can set the table for lunch," said the little grandmother. "Of 
course you'll stay, you and Judy. Take Judy with you, Anne." 
Belinda and Becky Sharp followed the two girls into the dining-room. 
Becky perched herself on the wide window-sill in the sunshine, and 
Belinda sat at Judy's feet and blinked up at her. 
"Belinda is awfully spoiled," said Anne, to break the stiffness, as she 
spread the table with a thin old cloth, "but she is such a dear we can't
help it." 
Judy drew her skirts away from Belinda's patting paw. "I hate cats," she 
said, with decision. 
Anne's lips set in a firm line, but she did not say anything. Presently, 
however, she looked down at Belinda, who rubbed against the table leg, 
and as she met the affectionate glance of the cat's green orbs, her own 
eyes said: "I am not going to like her, Belinda," and Belinda said, 
"Purr-up," in polite acquiescence. 
Judy had taken off her hat and coat, and she sat a slender white figure 
in the old rocker. Around her eyes were dark shadows of weariness, 
and she was very pale. 
"How good the air feels," she murmured, and laid her head back against 
the cushion with a sigh. 
Anne's heart smote her. "Aren't you feeling well, Judy?" she asked, 
timidly. 
"I'm never well," Judy said, slowly. "I'm tired, tired to death, Anne." 
Anne set the little blue bowls at the places, softly. She had never felt 
tired in her life, nor sick. "Wouldn't you like a glass of milk?" she 
asked, "and not wait until lunch is ready? It might do you good." 
"I hate milk," said Judy. 
Anne sat down helplessly and looked at the weary figure opposite. "I 
am afraid you won't have much for lunch," she quavered, at last. "We 
haven't anything but bread and milk." 
"I don't want any lunch," said Judy, listlessly. "Don't worry about me, 
Anne." 
But Anne went to the cupboard and brought out a precious store of    
    
		
	
	
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