Who else, her friends wondered, could have cleared the social

horizon for Paula Breckenridge's daughter so effectively? With

what brisk resoluteness the new mother had cut short the aimless

European wanderings, cropped the child's artificially curled hair,

given away the unsuitable silk stockings and the ridiculous frocks

and hats. Billy, shorn and bewildered, had been brought home; had

entered Miss Proctor's select school, entered Miss Roger's select

dancing class, entered Professor Darling's expensive riding

classes. Billy, in dark-blue Peter Thompsons, in black stockings

and laced boots, had been dropped in among other little girls in

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Peter Thompsons and laced boots, little girls with the approved

names of Whittaker and Bowditch, Moran and Merridew and Parmalee.

Billy had never doubted her stepmother's judgment; like all of the

new Mrs. Breckenridge's friends, she was deeply, dumbly impressed

with that lady's amazing efficiency. She had been a spoiled and

discontented little rowdy. She became an entirely self-satisfied

little gentlewoman. Clarence, jealously watching her progress,

knew that Rachael was doing for his daughter far more than he

could ever do himself.

But Rachael, if she had expected reward, reaped none. Her husband

was a supremely selfish man, and his daughter inherited his

sublime ability to protect his own pleasure at any cost. Carol

admired her step-mother, but she was an indolent and luxury-loving

little soul, and even as early as her twelfth or fourteenth year

she had been deeply flattered by the evidences of her own power

over her father. Into her youthful training no reverence for

parents--real or adopted--had been infused; she called her father

"Clancy," as some of his intimate friends called him, and he

delighted to take her orders and bow to her pretty tyranny.

Before she was sixteen he began to take her about with him: to

dances, to the theatre, and for long trips in his car. He entered

eagerly into her young friendships, frantic to prove himself as

young at heart as she. He paid her the extravagant compliments of

a lover, and gave her her grandmother's beautiful jewelry, as well

as every trinket that caught her eye.

And Billy accepted his attentions with a finished coquetry that

was far from childlike, a flush on her satin cheek, a dimple

puckering the corner of her mouth, and silky lashes lowered over

her satisfied eyes. She was inevitably precocious in many ways,

but she was young enough still to fancy herself one of the

irresistible beauties and belles of the world, and to flaunt a

perfectly conscious arrogance in the eyes of all other women.

All this was bewildering and painful to Rachael. She had never

loved her husband--love entered into none of her relationships--

her marriage had been only a step in the steady progress of her

life toward the position she desired in the world. But she had

liked him. She had liked his child, and she had come into the new

arrangement kindly and gallantly determined to make the venture at

least as profitable to them both as it was to her.




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