Rilla of Ingleside

by

Lucy Maud Montgomery

CONTENTS

I [GLEN "NOTES" AND OTHER MATTERS]
II [DEW OF MORNING]
III [MOONLIT MIRTH]
IV [THE PIPER PIPES]
V ["THE SOUND OF A GOING"]
VI [SUSAN, RILLA, AND DOG MONDAY MAKE A RESOLUTION]
VII [A WAR-BABY AND A SOUP TUREEN]
VIII [RILLA DECIDES]
IX [DOC HAS A MISADVENTURE]
X [THE TROUBLES OF RILLA]
XI [DARK AND BRIGHT]
XII [IN THE DAYS OF LANGEMARCK]
XIII [A SLICE OF HUMBLE PIE]
XIV [THE VALLEY OF DECISION]
XV [UNTIL THE DAY BREAK]
XVI [REALISM AND ROMANCE]
XVII [THE WEEKS WEAR BY]
XVIII [A WAR-WEDDING]
XIX ["THEY SHALL NOT PASS"]
XX [NORMAN DOUGLAS SPEAKS OUT IN MEETING]
XXI ["LOVE AFFAIRS ARE HORRIBLE"]
XXII [LITTLE DOG MONDAY KNOWS]
XXIII ["AND SO, GOODNIGHT"]
XXIV [MARY IS JUST IN TIME]
XXV [SHIRLEY GOES]
XXVI [SUSAN HAS A PROPOSAL OF MARRIAGE]
XXVII [WAITING]
XXVIII [BLACK SUNDAY]
XXIX ["WOUNDED AND MISSING"]
XXX [THE TURNING OF THE TIDE]
XXXI [MRS. MATILDA PITTMAN]
XXXII [WORD FROM JEM]
XXXIII [VICTORY!]
XXXIV [MR. HYDE GOES TO HIS OWN PLACE AND SUSAN TAKES A HONEYMOON]
XXXV ["RILLA-MY-RILLA!"]

CHAPTER I

GLEN "NOTES" AND OTHER MATTERS

It was a warm, golden-cloudy, lovable afternoon. In the big living-room at Ingleside Susan Baker sat down with a certain grim satisfaction hovering about her like an aura; it was four o'clock and Susan, who had been working incessantly since six that morning, felt that she had fairly earned an hour of repose and gossip. Susan just then was perfectly happy; everything had gone almost uncannily well in the kitchen that day. Dr. Jekyll had not been Mr. Hyde and so had not grated on her nerves; from where she sat she could see the pride of her heart—the bed of peonies of her own planting and culture, blooming as no other peony plot in Glen St. Mary ever did or could bloom, with peonies crimson, peonies silvery pink, peonies white as drifts of winter snow.

Susan had on a new black silk blouse, quite as elaborate as anything Mrs. Marshall Elliott ever wore, and a white starched apron, trimmed with complicated crocheted lace fully five inches wide, not to mention insertion to match. Therefore Susan had all the comfortable consciousness of a well-dressed woman as she opened her copy of the Daily Enterprise and prepared to read the Glen "Notes" which, as Miss Cornelia had just informed her, filled half a column of it and mentioned almost everybody at Ingleside. There was a big, black headline on the front page of the Enterprise, stating that some Archduke Ferdinand or other had been assassinated at a place bearing the weird name of Sarajevo, but Susan tarried not over uninteresting, immaterial stuff like that; she was in quest of something really vital. Oh, here it was—"Jottings from Glen St. Mary." Susan settled down keenly, reading each one over aloud to extract all possible gratification from it.