Grace went down with Mary, and the two girls found Susan Jenks with the

rolls all puffy and perfect in their pans.

"There's plenty of them," she said to Mary, "an' if the croquettes give

out, you can fill up on rolls."

"Susan," Grace said, "when Mary gets married will you come and keep

house for me?"

Susan smiled. "Miss Mary ain't goin' to git married."

"Why not?"

"She ain't that kind. She's the kind that looks at a man and studies

about him, and then she waves him away and holds up her head, and says,

Advertisement..

'I'm sorry, but you won't do.'"

The two girls laughed. "How did you get that idea of me, Susan?" Mary

asked.

"By studyin' you," said Susan. "I ain't known you all your life for

nothin'.

"Now Miss Constance," she went on, as she opened the oven and peeped

in, "Miss Constance is just the other way. 'Most any nice man was

bound to git her. An' it was lucky that Mr. Gordon was the first."

"And what about me?" was Grace's demand.

"Go 'way," said Susan, "you knows yo'se'f, Miss Grace. You bats your

eyes at everybody, and gives your heart to nobody."

"And so Mary and I are to be old maids--oh, Susan."

"They don't call them old maids any more," Susan said, "and they ain't

old maids, not in the way they once was. An old maid is a woman who

ain't got any intrus' in life but the man she can't have, and you all

is the kin' that ain't got no intrus' in the men that want you."

They left her, laughing, and when they reached the dining-room they sat

down on the window-seat; where Mary had gazed out upon the dead garden

and the bronze boy.

"And now," said Grace, "tell me about Roger Poole."

"There isn't much to tell. He's given up his position in the Treasury,

and he's gone down to his cousin's home for a while. He's going to try

to write for the magazines; he thinks that stories of that section will

take."

"He's in love with you, Mary. But you're not in love with him--and you

mustn't be."

"Of course not. I'm not going to marry, Grace."

Grace gave her a little squeeze. "You don't know what you are going to

do, darling; no woman does. But I don't want you to fall in love with

anybody yet. Flit through life with me for a time. I'll take you to

Paris next summer, and show you my world."




Most Popular