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CH16P:14:Visit Mrs. Barry now.

Mrs. Barry indeed! snapped Marilla. Of all the unreasonable women I ever saw shes the worst. I told her it was all a mistake and you werent to blame, but she just simply didnt believe me. And she rubbed it well in about my currant wine and how Id always said it couldnt have the least effect on anybody. I just told her plainly that currant wine wasnt meant to be drunk three tumblerfuls at a time and that if a child I had to do with was so greedy Id sober her up with a right good spanking. Marilla whisked into the kitchen, grievously disturbed, leaving a very much distracted little soul in the porch behind her. Presently Anne stepped out bareheaded into the chill autumn dusk; very determinedly and steadily she took her way down through the sere clover field over the log bridge and up through the spruce grove, lighted by a pale little moon hanging low over the western woods. Mrs. Barry, coming to the door in answer to a timid knock, found a white-lipped eager-eyed suppliant on the doorstep. Her face hardened. Mrs. Barry was a woman of strong prejudices and dislikes, and her anger was of the cold, sullen sort which is always hardest to overcome. To do her justice, she really believed Anne had made Diana drunk out of sheer malice prepense, and she was honestly anxious to preserve her little daughter from the contamination of further intimacy with such a child.