Meg dropped her sheltering hands.
"Oh, no," she said, "oh! how CAN you think so? It is only I am so
horrid." She rummaged in her pocket and brought out the ribbon.
"Will you take it again?" she said--"oh, PLEASE, just to make me
feel less horrid. Oh, please take it!"
She looked at him with wet, imploring eyes, and held it out.
He took it, smoothed its crumpledness, and placed it in his
pocket-book.
"God bless you," he said, and the tone made Meg sob.
CHAPTER XX Little Judy
Across the grass came a little flying figure, Judy in a short
pink frock with her wild curls blowing about her face.
"Are you a candidate for sunstroke--where IS your hat, Miss Judy?"
Mr. Gillet asked.
Judy shook back her dark tangle:
"Sorrow a know I knows," she said--"it's a banana the General
is afther dyin' for, and sure it's a dead body I shall live to see
misself if you've eaten all the oranges."
Meg pushed the bag of fruit across the cloth to her, and tried to
tilt her hat over her tell-tale eyes.
But the bright dark ones had seen the wet lashes the first moment.
"I s'pose you've been reading stupid poetry and making Meg cry?"
she said, with an aggressive glance from Mr.
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